Fuente: Stanford News Headlines
  Expuesto el: jueves, 07 de junio de 2012 8:00
  Autor: Stanford News Headlines
  Asunto: NASA mission, led by Stanford biologist, finds massive algal  blooms under Arctic sea ice
| A massive phytoplankton    bloom has been found underneath the Arctic pack ice in the Chukchi Sea. The    under-ice bloom, previously thought impossible, will require a complete    rethinking of Arctic ecosystems – and is a potent indicator of global    warming's effects on the far north. The 2011 NASA-sponsored ICESCAPE expedition that    discovered the bloom was led by Stanford environmental Earth system science    Professor Kevin Arrigo. The paper    announcing the find appeared today in Science. Under-ice    discoveryUnlike most Arctic    research teams, ICESCAPE headed deep into the Chukchi Sea ice pack, north of the    Bering Strait. The research cruise, consisting of prominent scientists in the    fields of oceanography, biology, chemistry and optics, was intended to    improve NASA's remote monitoring of the Arctic's changing conditions. "Suddenly, the    fluorometer" – the fluorescence-measuring device used to estimate the    algal content of water – "went nuts," Arrigo said. "We thought    there was something wrong with the instrument." Most models of biological    production in the Arctic Ocean assume a value of zero below pack ice. Sea ice    and snow cover have historically reflected incoming solar radiation, leaving    no sunlight for plankton in the water below. "Not only was the    value not zero," said Arrigo, "production was higher there than it    was in open water." Based on samples from    surrounding water and on the species of algae in the bloom, the scientists    confirmed that the phytoplankton had not drifted under the ice from    elsewhere. Instead, changing ice    conditions now allow light to penetrate large swaths of Arctic sea ice. Thick    "multi-year" ice, which requires several seasons to accumulate, is    on the decline, while warming temperatures favor thinner "first-year    ice." Additionally, the melt pools that now commonly form on top of    Arctic sea ice decrease the ice pack's ability to reflect light. The resulting under-ice    environment is ideal for Arctic phytoplankton. The thin ice lets in light    while protecting the algae from ultraviolet radiation. "Grow rates under    the ice are higher than I thought was possible for Arctic phytoplankton,"    Arrigo said. Algal cells that would normally take three days to divide were    doubling more than once a day. A shifting    ArcticWhile the discovery marks    the first direct observation of an under-ice bloom, the conditions that allow    for it in the Chukchi Sea exist over a large area of the Arctic. "We suspect that    this is a lot more widespread than we realize," said Arrigo. The appearance of    under-ice blooms may presage wholesale shifts in the ecosystem of the Arctic.    Colder-water phytoplankton production, as with under-ice algae, may cause    organic matter to drop to the ocean floor sooner. The effect would benefit    bottom-feeding species, to the detriment of species that feed in the water    column. And, as algal blooms are    able to occur earlier in the year, animals that depend on timing their    behavior to "pulses" in algal productivity may be left out in the    cold. One piece of seemingly    good news is an increase in the Arctic's ability to sequester carbon. As the    Arctic Ocean's productivity increases, so should its carbon capture rate.    But, Arrigo says, the effect is unlikely to make much difference. "Even if the amount    of CO2 going into the Arctic Ocean doubled, it's a blip on a    global scale," he said. Media ContactKevin Arrigo,    Environmental Earth System Science: (650) 723-3599, arrigo@stanford.edu Max McClure, Stanford    News Service: (650) 725-6737, maxmc@stanford.edu 
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