A fraction of the carbon captured by phytoplankton in the sunlit surface ocean sinks to depth as dead organic matter and faecal material. The microbial breakdown of this material in the subsurface ocean generates carbon dioxide. Collectively, this microbially mediated flux of carbon from the atmosphere to the ocean interior is termed the biological pump. In recent decades it has become clear that the composition of the phytoplankton community in the surface ocean largely determines the quantity and quality of organic matter that sinks to depth. This settling organic matter, however, is not sufficient to meet the energy demands of microbes in the dark ocean. Two additional sources of organic matter have been identified: non-sinking organic p...
International audienceBy altering the number, size, and density of particles in the ocean, the activ...
Without small oceanic organisms atmospheric CO2 levels would be about 200 ppm higher than they are t...
International audiencePhotosynthesis in the surface ocean produces approximately 100 gigatonnes of o...
International audienceThe biological pump is the set of processes by which inorganic carbon (e.g., c...
The biological pump is a process whereby CO2 in the upper ocean is fixed by primary producers and tr...
Sinking particulate organic matter controls the flux of carbon (C) from the surface ocean to the dee...
The oceans’ biological pump (BP) exports large amounts of particulate organic carbon (POC) to the me...
The biological pump is a process whereby CO2 in the upper ocean is fixed by primary producers and tr...
International audienceThe oceanic biological carbon pump (BCP) regulates the Earth carbon cycle by t...
Organic detritus passing from the sea surface through the water column to the sea floor controls nut...
The sinking of photosynthetically produced organic carbon from the ocean surface to its interior is ...
Biogeochemical processes in the ocean are (to a large extent) regulated by the physico-chemical char...
Oceans cover ~70% of the Earths surface and are the second largest global carbon reservoir. Major pr...
The production of organic matter at the ocean's surface, its transport, and subsequent remineralizat...
Marine microbes are an important control on carbon (C) sequestration depth and biogeochemical cyclin...
International audienceBy altering the number, size, and density of particles in the ocean, the activ...
Without small oceanic organisms atmospheric CO2 levels would be about 200 ppm higher than they are t...
International audiencePhotosynthesis in the surface ocean produces approximately 100 gigatonnes of o...
International audienceThe biological pump is the set of processes by which inorganic carbon (e.g., c...
The biological pump is a process whereby CO2 in the upper ocean is fixed by primary producers and tr...
Sinking particulate organic matter controls the flux of carbon (C) from the surface ocean to the dee...
The oceans’ biological pump (BP) exports large amounts of particulate organic carbon (POC) to the me...
The biological pump is a process whereby CO2 in the upper ocean is fixed by primary producers and tr...
International audienceThe oceanic biological carbon pump (BCP) regulates the Earth carbon cycle by t...
Organic detritus passing from the sea surface through the water column to the sea floor controls nut...
The sinking of photosynthetically produced organic carbon from the ocean surface to its interior is ...
Biogeochemical processes in the ocean are (to a large extent) regulated by the physico-chemical char...
Oceans cover ~70% of the Earths surface and are the second largest global carbon reservoir. Major pr...
The production of organic matter at the ocean's surface, its transport, and subsequent remineralizat...
Marine microbes are an important control on carbon (C) sequestration depth and biogeochemical cyclin...
International audienceBy altering the number, size, and density of particles in the ocean, the activ...
Without small oceanic organisms atmospheric CO2 levels would be about 200 ppm higher than they are t...
International audiencePhotosynthesis in the surface ocean produces approximately 100 gigatonnes of o...