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Clearing up a cloudy view of phytoplankton's role in the climate system | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
By Caitlyn Kennedy, Climate Program Office
Researchers Trish Quinn and Tim Bates of NOAA's Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory, are interested in understanding how phytoplankton leave their mark on the climate system. For decades, Earth scientists have hypothesized that, in addition to being the cornerstone of the ocean food web, chemicals released by phytoplankton are responsible for allowing clouds to form over the open ocean. Because clouds play a huge role in how much sunlight reaches and warms the Earth's surface, scientists thought phytoplankton's contribution to cloud formation was a critical part of the climate system. Proposed in the 1980s, it was an elegant hypothesis that reflected scientists' growing awareness of how intimately one part of the Earth system could be connected to another.
High concentrations of aerosols in the air can lead to clouds made of lots of small cloud droplets. These droplets function like an intricately designed crystal, reflecting sunlight off of their many surfaces. Ironically, the dense, bright white clouds are "dirtier:" they contain more aerosol particles than darker clouds that form in cleaner air, with fewer aerosols. For more than 25 years, scientists thought that over the open ocean - far from continental sources of aerosols like dust, soot, and pollen - phytoplankton emissions of dimethyl sulfide were the most significant source of aerosol particles that provide seeds for clouds.
"Over the past two decades, the NOAA Climate Program Office has supported our research group's efforts to make measurements of aerosols aboard ships in many of the world's ocean regions," said Quinn. "One of our goals for these cruises was to find evidence to support this hypothesis." What Quinn and Bates concluded was that phytoplankton emissions are not as important to the cloud-making process over remote oceans as was previously thought. Scientists are now investigating to see if other natural aerosol sources, such as sea salt and organic compounds from sea spray, show a stronger link between ocean emissions and cloud formation.
Reference: Quinn, P. K.; Bates, T. S. (2011): The case against climate regulation via oceanic phytoplankton sulphur emissions. Nature, 480 (7375), 51-56 |
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February 07, 2012 |
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CLIMATE · OCEANS, GREAT LAKES, and COASTS · WEATHER
and AIR QUALITY |
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