For the past few decades, scientists have been observing natural ocean fertilization events — episodes when plumes of volcanic ash, glacial flour, wildfire soot, and desert dust blow out onto the sea surface and spur massive blooms of phytoplankton. But beyond these extreme events, there is a steady, long-distance rain of dust particles onto the ocean that promotes phytoplankton growth just about all year and in nearly every basin.
In a new study published May 5 in the
journal Science,
a team of researchers from Oregon State University, the University of Maryland
Baltimore County, and NASA combined satellite observations with an advanced
computer model to home in on how mineral dust from land fertilizes the growth
of phytoplankton in the ocean. Phytoplankton are microscopic, plant-like
organisms that form the center of the marine food web.
This image, acquired on April 8,
2011, with the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS)
instruments on NASA’s Terra satellite, shows Saharan dust over the Bay of
Biscay. A phytoplankton bloom makes the water appear bright green and blue.
Sediment is likely contributing to some of the color, especially in coastal
areas.
Credits: NASA Earth Observatory
image by Wanmei Liang, using MODIS data from NASA EOSDIS LANCE and
GIBS/Worldview.
Phytoplankton float near the ocean
surface primarily subsisting on sunlight and mineral nutrients that well up
from the depths or float out to sea in coastal runoff. But mineral-rich desert
dust — borne by strong winds and deposited in the ocean — also plays
an important role in the health and abundance of phytoplankton.
According to the new study, dust
deposition onto the ocean supports about 4.5% of yearly global export
production — a measure of how much of the carbon phytoplankton take up
during photosynthesis sinks into the deep ocean. However, this contribution
approaches 20% to 40% in some ocean regions at middle and higher latitudes.
Phytoplankton play a large role in
Earth’s climate and carbon cycle. Like land plants, they contain chlorophyll
and derive energy from sunlight through photosynthesis. They produce oxygen and
sequester a tremendous amount of carbon dioxide in the process, potentially on
a scale comparable to rainforests. And they are at the bottom of an ocean-wide food
pecking order that ranges from tiny zooplankton to fish to whales.
Dust particles can travel thousands
of miles before falling into the ocean, where they nourish phytoplankton long
distances from the dust source, said study coauthor Lorraine Remer, a research
professor at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. “We knew that
atmospheric transport of desert dust is part of what makes the ocean ‘click,’
but we didn’t know how to find it,” she said.
Ocean Color
Tells a Tale
How do you track ocean biology from
400 miles above the surface of Earth? Follow the green trail of chlorophyll.
Study authors Toby Westberry and
Michael Behrenfeld — remote sensing oceanographers at Oregon State
University — analyzed 14 years of ocean color measurements collected by
the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Aqua satellite from 2003 through
2016. Tracing distinct signatures in ocean color, they were able to determine
not only when and where phytoplankton blooms occurred, but also how healthy and
abundant they were (based on the concentration of chlorophyll).
To determine if the phytoplankton
were responding to desert dust, the team compared their ocean color findings
with output from NASA’s Goddard Earth Observing System (GEOS) model of dust deposition events
for the same time period. These events ranged in intensity from mighty Saharan
dust storms to relatively subdued plumes off the U.S. West Coast. They found
that even modest amounts of desert dust increased the mass and improved the
health of phytoplankton blooms almost everywhere they looked.
Previous studies had focused on
large local events — volcanic eruptions, wildfires, extreme dust storms
— that spewed huge amounts of organic and mineral particles into the air.
In other studies, researchers intentionally stimulated
phytoplankton growth by
‘seeding’ seawater with iron, a key but often limited nutrient in the ocean.
“We observed that the phytoplankton
response wasn’t just happening in iron-poor areas of the ocean,” said coauthor
Hongbin Yu, a scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. “The responses
were occurring all over the world. Add a little bit of nutrients and you've got
something happening in the water.”
The nutritional benefits of desert
dust aren’t limited to iron, the scientists said. Dust particles contain other
nutrients that plants need, notably phosphorus and nitrogen.
More research is needed as climate
change impacts atmospheric patterns, soil moisture, and other factors that
influence how dust journeys to the ocean, Remer said.
“For me,” she added, “the most interesting piece of what we accomplished here was bringing oceanographers and atmospheric scientists to the same table.”
Source: How
Desert Dust Nourishes the Growth of Phytoplankton at Sea | NASA
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