(Press-News.org) The seas around Antarctica can, at times, resemble a garden. Large-scale experiments where scientists spray iron into the waters, literally fertilizing phytoplankton, have created huge man-made algal blooms. Such geoengineering experiments produce diatoms, which pull carbon dioxide out of the air. Experts argue that this practice can help offset Earth's rising carbon dioxide levels. However, the experiments are controversial and, according to a new study at the Georgia Institute of Technology, perhaps not as effective as expected.
Georgia Tech research published online Monday in Nature Communications indicates that diatoms stuff more iron into their silica shells than they actually need. As a result, there's not enough iron to go around, and the added iron may stimulate less productivity than expected. The study also says that the removal of iron through incorporation into diatom silica may be a profound factor controlling the Southern Ocean's bioavailable pool of iron, adversely affecting the ecosystem.
"Just like someone walking through a buffet line who takes the last two pieces of cake, even though they know they'll only eat one, they're hogging the food," said Ellery Ingall, a professor in Georgia Tech's College of Sciences. "Everyone else in line gets nothing; the person's decision affects these other people."
Ingall says, similarly, these "hogging" diatoms negatively affect the number of carbon-trapping plankton produced. They also outcompete other organisms for the iron.
"It appears the diatoms aren't using all of the iron for photosynthesis," he said. "They're incorporating iron in their shells for another purpose, keeping it from others and affecting the plankton ecosystem."
Researchers have known for years that diatoms can remove iron from oceans and carbon from the atmosphere, but little is known about how iron is cycled and removed from the Antarctic region.
Ingall and a former Georgia Tech graduate student, Julia Diaz, spent nearly six weeks in Antarctica's Ross Sea from 2008 to 2009, trying to learn more. They collected samples in the frigid waters and used them to create what is believed to be the first spectroscopic, compositional characterization of iron in marine biogenic silica. Ingall conducted an X-ray analysis of the phytoplankton at the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory.
A major source of bioavailable iron in Antarctica is from melting snow and dust deposition. Ingall found that iron addition via these sources barely keeps pace with subtraction by diatoms.
"Uptake of iron by diatoms is significant compared to what Mother Nature is able to naturally add to the ocean," he said. "This uptake could shift microbial communities toward organisms with relatively lower iron requirements."
According to Ingall, removal of iron by diatom-dominated phytoplankton communities may dampen the intended outcome of enhanced carbon uptake through iron fertilization by reducing the productivity of other phytoplankton, which take up carbon dioxide more efficiently.
INFORMATION:
This research was funded by the National Science Foundation (EDI-0849494, PLY-0836144, and EDI-1060884). The findings and conclusions are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the NSF.
Moving iron in Antarctica
New study on carbon dioxide absorption in Antarctic seas
2013-06-12
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
University of Toronto breakthrough allows fast, reliable pathogen identification
2013-06-12
U of T Breakthrough Allows Fast, Reliable Pathogen Identification
TORONTO, ON – Life-threatening bacterial infections cause tens of thousands of deaths every year in North America. Increasingly, many infections are resistant to first-line antibiotics. Unfortunately, current methods of culturing bacteria in the lab can take days to report the specific source of the infection, and even longer to pinpoint the right antibiotic that will clear the infection. There remains an urgent, unmet need for technologies that can allow bacterial infections to be rapidly and specifically ...
Do parasites upset food web theory?
2013-06-12
Parasites comprise a large proportion of the diversity of species in every ecosystem. Despite this, they are rarely included in analyses or models of food webs. If parasites play different roles from other predators and prey, however, their inclusion could fundamentally alter our understanding of how food webs are organized. In a paper published 11 June in the open access journal PLOS Biology, Santa Fe Institute Professor Jennifer Dunne and her team test this assertion and show that including parasites does alter the structure of food webs, but that most changes occur because ...
Walking or cycling to work linked to healthier weight in India
2013-06-12
People in India who walk or cycle to work are less likely to be overweight or obese, according to a study led by Christopher Millett from Imperial College London and the Public Health Foundation of India and colleagues. Their paper reporting the study, published in this week's PLOS Medicine, reveals that cyclists are also less likely to have diabetes or high blood pressure compared to people who take public or private transport to work.
These findings are important as they suggest that active travel could reduce rates of important risk factors for many chronic diseases, ...
Low-and middle-income countries need to prioritize noncommunicable disease prevention
2013-06-12
Nine years after the World Health Organization adopted a global strategy on diet, physical activity, and health to address risk factors for chronic diseases such as heart disease and diabetes (referred to internationally as noncommunicable diseases), only a few low-and middle-income countries have implemented robust national policies to help prevent such diseases, according to a study by international researchers published in this week's PLOS Medicine.
These findings are important as they suggest that the majority of the world's low- and middle-income countries are not ...
Mayo Clinic: Big toe isn't biggest culprit in gout flare-ups; other joints tied to higher risk
2013-06-12
MADRID -- The painful rheumatic condition gout is often associated with the big toe, but it turns out that patients at highest risk of further flare-ups are those whose gout first involved other joints, such as a knee or elbow, Mayo Clinic has found. The study is among several that Mayo researchers are presenting in Madrid at the European League Against Rheumatism's annual meeting. In other findings, Mayo discovered a clue to why lupus tends to be worse in African-Americans; chronicled erratic blood pressure in rheumatoid arthritis patients; found gout-like deposits in ...
Researchers discover 2-step mechanism of inner ear tip link regrowth
2013-06-12
A team of NIH-supported researchers is the first to show, in mice, an unexpected two-step process that happens during the growth and regeneration of inner ear tip links. Tip links are extracellular tethers that link stereocilia, the tiny sensory projections on inner ear hair cells that convert sound into electrical signals, and play a key role in hearing. The discovery offers a possible mechanism for potential interventions that could preserve hearing in people whose hearing loss is caused by genetic disorders related to tip link dysfunction. The work was supported by ...
Childhood cancer survivors found to have significant undiagnosed disease as adults
2013-06-12
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital has found that childhood cancer survivors overwhelmingly experience a significant amount of undiagnosed, serious disease through their adult years, establishing the importance of proactive, life-long clinical health screenings for this growing high-risk population. The findings appear in the June 12 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
Overall, 98 percent of the 1,713 survivors in the study had at least one chronic health condition, hundreds of which were diagnosed through clinical screenings conducted as part ...
Intervention improves adherence to antibiotic prescribing guidelines for children
2013-06-12
An intervention consisting of clinician education coupled with personalized audit and feedback about antibiotic prescribing improved adherence to prescribing guidelines for common pediatric bacterial acute respiratory tract infections, although the intervention did not affect antibiotic prescribing for viral infections, according to a study in the June 12 issue of JAMA.
"Antibiotics are the most common prescription drugs given to children. Although hospitalized children frequently receive antibiotics, the vast majority of antibiotic use occurs in the outpatient setting, ...
Very high prevalence of chronic health conditions among adult survivors of childhood cancer
2013-06-12
In an analysis that included more than 1,700 adult survivors of childhood cancer, researchers found a very high percentage of survivors with 1 or more chronic health conditions, with an estimated cumulative prevalence of any chronic health condition of 95 percent at age 45 years, according to a study in the June 12 issue of JAMA.
"Curative therapy for pediatric malignancies has produced a growing population of adults formerly treated for childhood cancer who are at risk for health problems that appear to increase with aging. The prevalence of cancer-related toxic effects ...
Maternal overweight and obesity during pregnancy associated with increased risk of preterm delivery
2013-06-12
In a study that included more than 1.5 million deliveries in Sweden, maternal overweight and obesity during pregnancy were associated with increased risk for preterm delivery, with the highest risks observed for extremely preterm deliveries, according to a study in the June 12 issue of JAMA.
"Maternal overweight and obesity has, due to the high prevalence and associated risks, replaced smoking as the most important preventable risk factor for adverse pregnancy outcomes in many countries. Preterm birth, defined as a delivery of a liveborn infant before 37 gestational weeks, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
UC Study: Long sentences for juveniles make reentry into society more difficult
Death by feral cat: DNA shows cats to be culprits in killing of native animals
Plant Physiology is Searching for its Next Editor-in-Chief
Clothes dryers and the bottom line: Switching to air drying can save hundreds
New insights into tRNA-derived small RNAs offer hope for digestive tract disease diagnosis and treatment
Emotive marketing for sustainable consumption?
Prostate cancer is not a death knell, study shows
Unveiling the role of tumor-infiltrating immune cells in endometrial carcinoma
Traditional Chinese medicine unlocks new potential in treating diseases through ferroptosis regulation
MSU study pinpoints the impact of prenatal stress across 27 weeks of pregnancy
Biochemist’s impact on science and students honored
ELF4: A key transcription factor shaping immunity and cancer progression
Updated chronic kidney disease management guidelines recommend SGLT2 inhibitors regardless of diabetes or kidney disease type
New research explores how AI can build trust in knowledge work
Compound found in common herbs inspires potential anti-inflammatory drug for Alzheimer’s disease
Inhaled COVID vaccine begins recruitment for phase-2 human trials
What’s in a label? It’s different for boys vs. girls, new study of parents finds
Genes combined with immune response to Epstein-Barr virus increase MS risk
Proximity and prejudice: Gay discrimination in the gig economy
New paper suggests cold temperatures trigger shapeshifting proteins
Reproductive justice–driven pregnancy interventions can improve mental health
Intranasal herpes infection may produce neurobehavioral symptoms, UIC study finds
Developing treatment strategies for an understudied bladder disease
Investigating how decision-making and behavioral control develop
Rutgers researchers revive decades-old pregnancy cohort with modern scientific potential
Rising CO2 likely to speed decrease in ‘space sustainability’
Study: Climate change will reduce the number of satellites that can safely orbit in space
Mysterious phenomenon at center of galaxy could reveal new kind of dark matter
Unlocking the secrets of phase transitions in quantum hardware
Deep reinforcement learning optimizes distributed manufacturing scheduling
[Press-News.org] Moving iron in AntarcticaNew study on carbon dioxide absorption in Antarctic seas