(Press-News.org) New research into the marine phosphorus cycle is deepening our understanding of the impact of human activities on ecosystems in coastal seas.
The research, co-led by the University of East Anglia, in partnership with the Sino-UK Joint Research Centre at the Ocean University of China, looked at the impact of aerosols and river run-off on microalgae in the coastal waters of China.
It identified an ‘Anthropogenic Nitrogen Pump’ which changes the phosphorus cycle and therefore likely coastal biodiversity and associated ecosystem services.
In a balanced ecosystem, microalgae, also known as phytoplankton, provide food for a wide range of sea creatures including fish, shrimp, and jellyfish.
Lead researcher Haoyu Jin, a visiting PhD student at UEA’s School of Environmental Sciences from the Ocean University of China, said: “Our work provides the foundation for knowing the consequences of man-made eutrophication, whereby nutrients cause massive algal blooms and unbalance nitrogen-phosphorus nutrient structure.
“Due to economic activity especially in coastal regions, which are the most productive world-wide, there is an increased production of waste that includes liquid substances and aerosols. The former end up in the rivers and the latter end up in the atmosphere.
“What our study shows is that dissolved nitrogen is the prevalent nutrient in these waste products added to rivers and the atmosphere. However, life requires other nutrients too and one which is equally important is phosphorous.
“What we found is that the addition of nitrate as waste products in rivers and the atmosphere reduces phosphate so much in coastal oceans, that the algae eventually become limited by this nutrient.
“However, some of them are capable to access a pool of phosphorous that in the past played less of a role in coastal oceans known as dissolved organic phosphorus (DOP).”
The researchers carried out a series of microcosm experiments in China’s coastal seas.
Phytoplankton normally require dissolved inorganic phosphorus (DIP) for growth, but as this is limited by increasing nitrogen levels, the microalgae have been able to enhance the activity of alkaline phosphatase to utilise dissolved organic phosphorus (DOP).
Co-researcher Prof Thomas Mock, of UEA’s School of Environmental Sciences, said: “If we continue with business as usual in terms of polluting coastal oceans with mostly nitrate-rich waste products, coastal biological communities will change because only those primary producers will thrive which are able to use organic phosphorus instead.
“It is basically a paradox: although we pollute the coastal oceans with nutrients, it is not done with the balanced set of nutrients that matches the requirements of the ocean organisms.
“In terms of ocean microbiota, they likely change their diversity and metabolism to be able to cope with this poor diet. However, as they underpin coastal food webs as primary producers, there will be knock-on effects on ecosystem services provided by coastal oceans, such as fisheries.”
Most previous studies into this issue have focused on open oceans which generally have low levels of plant nutrients and where the effect of river runoff is limited due to geographical reach.
In contrast, this work has provided evidence that atmospheric deposition and river runoff can stimulate phytoplankton growth in the China Coastal Seas and likely other coastal seas with industrial activity on the adjacent land.
The research introduces the driving mechanism for phytoplankton growth under the influence of human activities, termed the ‘Anthropogenic Nitrogen Pump’, where phytoplankton absorbs a large amount of nitrogen, exacerbates phosphorus deficiency, and enhances the bioavailability of DOP for phytoplankton growth.
Furthermore, the study reveals that the hydrolysis and utilisation of DOP are jointly regulated by the concentration of dissolved inorganic phosphorus and phytoplankton biomass, indicating that the process driven by the ‘Anthropogenic Nitrogen Pump’ widely exists in coastal seas globally with different nutrient levels.
Other Chinese partners in the research include the Laoshan Laboratory, Yantai University, The Yantai Institute of Coastal Zone Research and the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing.
The research was funded by NSFC-Shandong Joint Fund, National Key R&D Program of China, National Natural Science Foundation of chine and Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities.
‘Atmospheric deposition and river runoff stimulate the utilization of dissolved organic phosphorus in coastal seas’ is published today in Nature Communications.
END
New research shows how pollutants from aerosols and river run-off are changing the marine phosphorus cycle in coastal seas
2024-01-30
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
How a mouse’s brain bends time
2024-01-30
Life has a challenging tempo. Sometimes, it moves faster or slower than we’d like. Nevertheless, we adapt. We pick up the rhythm of conversations. We keep pace with the crowd walking a city sidewalk.
“There are many instances where we have to do the same action but at different tempos. So the question is, how does the brain do it," says Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Assistant Professor Arkarup Banerjee.
Now, Banerjee and collaborators have uncovered a new clue that suggests the brain bends our processing of time to suit our ...
Religious people coped better with the Covid-19 pandemic, research suggests
2024-01-30
People of religious faith may have experienced lower levels of unhappiness and stress than secular people during the UK’s Covid-19 lockdowns in 2020 and 2021, according to new University of Cambridge research.
The findings follow a recently published Cambridge-led study suggesting that worsening mental health after experiencing Covid infection – either personally or in those close to you – was also somewhat ameliorated by religious belief. This study looked at the US population during early 2021.
University of Cambridge economists argue ...
IHI launches a new interdisciplinary initiative to revolutionize the way Alzheimer’s disease is detected, diagnosed, prevented, and treated
2024-01-30
Stockholm, January 30, 2024 — Members of the AD-RIDDLE consortium announced today that they will begin a new initiative that aims to bridge the gap between Alzheimer’s research, implementation science, and precision medicine. The AD-RIDDLE programme will offer healthcare professionals a suite of validated solutions for timely detection and diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease and dementias, to match individuals with the right interventions at the right time, enabling people to better understand what they can do to reduce risk and prevent cognitive decline.
Alzheimer’s disease represents a major public ...
Goats can tell if you are happy or angry by your voice alone
2024-01-30
HONG KONG (18 Jan 2024) — Goats can tell the difference between a happy-sounding human voice and an angry-sounding one, according to research co-led by Professor Alan McElligott, an expert in animal behaviour and welfare at City University of Hong Kong (CityUHK).
The study reveals that goats may have developed a sensitivity to our vocal cues over their long association with humans, according to the study published in Animal Behaviour.
Long known for their own sonorous vocal skills, goats in the study tended to spend longer gazing towards the source of the sound after a change in the valence of a human voice, i.e., when the playback switched from a happier to ...
Scientists identify how fasting may protect against inflammation
2024-01-30
Cambridge scientists may have discovered a new way in which fasting helps reduce inflammation – a potentially damaging side-effect of the body’s immune system that underlies a number of chronic diseases.
In research published in Cell Reports, the team describes how fasting raises levels of a chemical in the blood known as arachidonic acid, which inhibits inflammation. The researchers say it may also help explain some of the beneficial effects of drugs such as aspirin.
Scientists have known for some time that our diet – particular a high calorie Western diet – can increase our risk of diseases ...
Superfluids could share characteristic with common fluids
2024-01-30
Every fluid — from Earth’s atmosphere to blood pumping through the human body — has viscosity, a quantifiable characteristic describing how the fluid will deform when it encounters some other matter. If the viscosity is higher, the fluid flows calmly, a state known as laminar. If the viscosity decreases, the fluid undergoes the transition from laminar to turbulent flow. The degree of laminar or turbulent flow is referred to as the Reynolds number, which is inversely proportional to the viscosity. The Reynolds law of dynamic similarity or Reynolds similitude, states that if two fluids flow around similar structures with different length ...
Alzheimer’s treatment roadblocks can be eased by engaging primary care providers in screenings
2024-01-30
There is substantial geographic variation across the U.S. health care system to diagnose and treat early-stage Alzheimer’s disease with disease-modifying therapies, and engaging primary care providers in the effort may be a key to accelerating delivery of emerging new treatments, according to a new RAND report.
Enabling primary care practitioners to diagnose and evaluate patients for treatment eligibility would make the biggest impact on reducing wait times for specialists and increase the number of people treated with disease-modifying therapies from 2025 through 2044.
While primary care providers are technically capable of performing cognitive assessments, ...
New study identifies link between presence of oncofoetal ecosystem and liver cancer recurrence
2024-01-30
A new causal link has been found between the presence of oncofoetal ecosystems and recurrence and response to immunotherapy in primary liver cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)
The findings will pave the way to use the presence of oncofoetal ecosystems as a biomarker to treat HCC, a disease with a poor prognosis that is typically diagnosed late
Singapore, 30 January 2024 - A team of clinician-scientists and researchers from the National Cancer Centre Singapore (NCCS), Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), the Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research and global research partners, has found a causal link between the presence of oncofoetal ...
Unveiling the effect of Ti substitutions on the static oxidation behavior of (Hf,Ti)C at 2500 ℃
2024-01-30
Hf-based carbides are highly desirable candidates for thermal protection applications above 2000 ℃ due to their extremely high melting point and favorable mechanical properties. However, as a crucial indicator for composition design and performance assessment, the static oxidation behavior of Hf-based carbides at their potential service temperatures has been rarely studied.
In a study published in the KeAi journal Advanced Powder Materials, a group of researchers from Central South University and China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology revealed the static oxidation mechanism ...
High power fiber laser at 1.2 μm waveband
2024-01-30
Laser sources operating at the 1.2 μm wavelength band have some unique applications in photodynamic therapy, biomedical diagnosis and oxygen sensing. Additionally, they can be adopted as pump sources for mid-infrared optical parametric generation as well as visible light generation by frequency doubling. Laser generation at 1.2 μm waveband has been achieved with different solid-state lasers including semiconductor laser, diamond Raman laser, and fiber laser. Among these three types, fiber laser thanks to its simple structure, good beam quality, and operation flexibility, is a great choice for 1.2 μm waveband laser generation.
Researchers ...