Constraining respiration rates of mesopelagic fishes

Lead Research Organisation: University of Southampton
Department Name: Sch of Ocean and Earth Science

Abstract

The oceans naturally remove huge amounts of carbon from the atmosphere, protecting us from some of the negative effects of human carbon emissions. However, our understanding of exactly how this carbon capture and storage system works is incomplete. To avoid being returned to the atmosphere, carbon must be exported to the deep ocean. Biology plays a major role in exporting carbon, but the so called 'biological carbon pump' is in fact a very complicated set of interacting processes each of which is incompletely understood. As atmospheric carbon concentrations increase and the global ocean warms, processes controlling the biological carbon pump may change, making it even harder to predict medium to long term climate futures.
The aim of this project is to study one of the least understood components of the biological carbon pump: the role that vertically migrating fishes play in transporting carbon into the deep ocean. A huge volume of small fishes lives in the middle depths of the world's ocean. These 'mesopelagic' fishes rise to surface waters in the night, consuming carbon, then swim back to deep water during the day where some of this carbon is respired and returned to the water. Mesopelagic fishes are the most abundant vertebrates on the planet and it is estimated that they are responsible for as much active movement of carbon as all zooplankton - but these fishes are very poorly known and are not included in most carbon cycle models.
To understand how much carbon fish can move, we need to know how much carbon each fish respires, and how this changes as temperature changes. These measurements have not been possible before, but our team has developed a new way to estimate respiration rates of fishes from the chemical composition of ear stones. Using this tool we have shown that current ideas about how much fish respire, and how sensitive they are to temperature are wrong. In this project we will apply this new tool to generate the first measurements of field respiration rates of mesopelagic fishes. We will look at fish from tropical, sub tropical and cool temperature areas to be sure that our results can be applied across the whole Atlantic Ocean.
We will measure how much carbon mesopelagic fish of different body sizes respire, and how sensitive this is to the temperature of the water they inhabit. Using these data we will liaise with other teams measuring the global abundance and body size distribution of mesopelagic fishes to refine estimates of the total amount of carbon respired by mesopelagic fishes. This will allow ocean biogeochemical modellers to better assess the relative importance of fish compared to other components of the biological carbon pump.

Our measurements of the thermal sensitivity of field respiration rates will test how fish-related carbon movements will respond to increasing temperature. Currently models assume that respiration rates increase quite rapidly as waters warm, implying that the active carbon flux will also increase. However, our pilot data implies that fish are less sensitive to temperature than assumed. This means that increasing temperatures will not necessarily increase the rate at which carbon is transported by fish into the deep ocean. Solving these problems is very important if we want to better predicting how the biological carbon pump will respond to future climate change.

Publications

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Description Aarhus university Peter Gronkjaer 
Organisation Aarhus University
Country Denmark 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Building on the metabolic rate proxy developed in our group by PhD student Shores, we obtained a Marie Curie research fellowship for Ming-Tsung Chung.
Collaborator Contribution The Aarhus group provided experimental materials and analytical equipment to establish direct calibrations between otolith d13C values and oxyge consumption rates
Impact papers in review
Start Year 2016
 
Description IMR Norway 
Organisation Norwegian Institute of Marine Research
Country Norway 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We have provided expertise in stable isotope ecology and biogeochemistry and are applying this to study fish and fiseries ecology of relevance to Norwegian fisheries science
Collaborator Contribution IMR provided berths on 3 fisheries cruises in the Barents in 2019, assissted with logistics around sample collection and shipping and provide expertise in fish ecology and supporting data
Impact no formal outputs yet as analyses are progressing
Start Year 2018
 
Description University Las Palmas 
Organisation University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Country Spain 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We are the principal instigators of the research approach bringing new methods to analyses of samples collected by the partner
Collaborator Contribution Partner brings samples (fishes with independent measures of metabolic rates) and expertise in physiology of mesopelagic fishes
Impact Not yet
Start Year 2022