Biogeochemical processes and ecosystem function in changing polar systems and their global impacts (BIOPOLE)
Lead Research Organisation:
NERC BRITISH ANTARCTIC SURVEY
Department Name: Science Programmes
Abstract
Climate change is threatening two key ecosystem services provided by the ocean for humankind: food and storage of atmospheric carbon. The polar regions are major influences on both but are also experiencing the most dramatic and rapid changes.
A better understanding of the factors affecting how nutrients are supplied and biologically processed in the ocean is needed to assess the future risk to quantify the dependence of the Earth system, and humanity, on this essential global function that supports global productivity and fisheries. Key nutrients, such as nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P), are not evenly distributed across the global ocean but are in excess in the polar regions from where they are exported to lower latitudes by ocean circulation. Living matter is produced through combining N, P and carbon (C) (and other minor elements) in a ratio that is more or less the same in most regions of the global ocean. However, the ratios found in the polar regions are substantially different. This is because, firstly, polar nutrients come from a diversity of sources (glaciers, sea-ice, rivers and other seas). Secondly, the polar ecosystem processes these nutrients and carbon in distinct ways. This results in i) a nutrient surplus, which is exported from the polar oceans and supports productivity globally, and ii) the transport of carbon from the atmosphere into deep waters distant from the atmosphere. The pressing issue is that rapid climatic change at the poles is changing both the supply of nutrients and the processing capacity of their ecosystems. This threatens not only the marine food stocks on which humanity depends but also the biological drawdown of C in the oceans, a critical regulator of global climate. Our ability to fully characterise and predict this threat is limited by inadequate representation of polar biogeochemical and ecosystem processes in Earth System Models (ESMs).
BIOPOLE represents and links together many of the major environmental research institutes in the UK, who will work with national and international partners to address this problem. We propose an ambitious combination of focussed observations, novel analyses and computer simulations to radically improve our ability to measure, understand and predict how nutrient supply and C storage in the polar regions will be affected by climate change. BIOPOLE will further identify and quantify the wider global impacts to ocean productivity and fisheries. We will sample and collect data at both poles to take a full Earth system perspective of this problem. The latest experimental and observational techniques will delineate C and nutrient processing by the unique polar communities. It will include the use of novel autonomous technologies to collect data over longer periods and greater areas than can be achieved by ships alone. Global modelling will be informed by the new understanding generated and used alongside other modelling approaches to better quantify the role that polar oceans play in sustaining global oceanic primary productivity and fish stocks, and to predict future trends.
Climate change is proceeding faster at the poles than any other region, resulting in sea-ice loss and glacial melting. There is a clear urgency in understanding the full biogeochemical and ecosystem level implications of these changes for the polar regions themselves and for the wider Earth system. As ice retreats, the fragile and globally significant ecosystems that are exposed require international protection, which depends on building a strong body of scientific evidence through co-ordinated polar science. Direct outputs from the ocean resulting from ocean productivity have been valued at $6.9trn, while that of the capacity of the oceans to absorb C is $4.3trn. The uncertainty in how climate change will impact these roles remains large, requiring both scientific and economic evaluation, and presenting a pressing challenge for both science and society.
A better understanding of the factors affecting how nutrients are supplied and biologically processed in the ocean is needed to assess the future risk to quantify the dependence of the Earth system, and humanity, on this essential global function that supports global productivity and fisheries. Key nutrients, such as nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P), are not evenly distributed across the global ocean but are in excess in the polar regions from where they are exported to lower latitudes by ocean circulation. Living matter is produced through combining N, P and carbon (C) (and other minor elements) in a ratio that is more or less the same in most regions of the global ocean. However, the ratios found in the polar regions are substantially different. This is because, firstly, polar nutrients come from a diversity of sources (glaciers, sea-ice, rivers and other seas). Secondly, the polar ecosystem processes these nutrients and carbon in distinct ways. This results in i) a nutrient surplus, which is exported from the polar oceans and supports productivity globally, and ii) the transport of carbon from the atmosphere into deep waters distant from the atmosphere. The pressing issue is that rapid climatic change at the poles is changing both the supply of nutrients and the processing capacity of their ecosystems. This threatens not only the marine food stocks on which humanity depends but also the biological drawdown of C in the oceans, a critical regulator of global climate. Our ability to fully characterise and predict this threat is limited by inadequate representation of polar biogeochemical and ecosystem processes in Earth System Models (ESMs).
BIOPOLE represents and links together many of the major environmental research institutes in the UK, who will work with national and international partners to address this problem. We propose an ambitious combination of focussed observations, novel analyses and computer simulations to radically improve our ability to measure, understand and predict how nutrient supply and C storage in the polar regions will be affected by climate change. BIOPOLE will further identify and quantify the wider global impacts to ocean productivity and fisheries. We will sample and collect data at both poles to take a full Earth system perspective of this problem. The latest experimental and observational techniques will delineate C and nutrient processing by the unique polar communities. It will include the use of novel autonomous technologies to collect data over longer periods and greater areas than can be achieved by ships alone. Global modelling will be informed by the new understanding generated and used alongside other modelling approaches to better quantify the role that polar oceans play in sustaining global oceanic primary productivity and fish stocks, and to predict future trends.
Climate change is proceeding faster at the poles than any other region, resulting in sea-ice loss and glacial melting. There is a clear urgency in understanding the full biogeochemical and ecosystem level implications of these changes for the polar regions themselves and for the wider Earth system. As ice retreats, the fragile and globally significant ecosystems that are exposed require international protection, which depends on building a strong body of scientific evidence through co-ordinated polar science. Direct outputs from the ocean resulting from ocean productivity have been valued at $6.9trn, while that of the capacity of the oceans to absorb C is $4.3trn. The uncertainty in how climate change will impact these roles remains large, requiring both scientific and economic evaluation, and presenting a pressing challenge for both science and society.
Organisations
- NERC BRITISH ANTARCTIC SURVEY (Lead Research Organisation)
- University of Alberta (Project Partner)
- Alfred Wegener Institute (Helmholtz) (Project Partner)
- University of Liverpool (Project Partner)
- Integrated Carbon Observation System (Project Partner)
- Pacific Oceanological Institute (Project Partner)
- U.S. Department of Commerce (Project Partner)
- Bedford Institute of Oceanography (Project Partner)
- Senckenberg BIK-F (Project Partner)
- Danish Technical University (Project Partner)
- South Atlantic Environmental Res Inst (Project Partner)
- University of Bristol (Project Partner)
- University of Alaska - Fairbanks (Project Partner)
- University of Washington (Project Partner)
- Florida State University (Project Partner)
- University Centre in Svalbard (UNIS) (Project Partner)
- Norwegian Institute for Water Research (Project Partner)
- Rutgers State University of New Jersey (Project Partner)
Publications

Anderson T
(2024)
Optimal phenology of life history events in Calanus finmarchicus : exit from diapause in relation to interannual variation in spring bloom timing and predation
in Journal of Plankton Research

Anderson T
(2022)
Quantifying the roles of food intake and stored lipid for growth and development throughout the life cycle of a high-latitude copepod, and consequences for ocean carbon sequestration
in Frontiers in Marine Science

Combes V
(2023)
Variability of the Shelf Circulation Around South Georgia, Southern Ocean
in Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans


Douglas C
(2024)
Exploring the relationship between sea ice and phytoplankton growth in the Weddell Gyre using satellite and Argo float data
in Ocean Science

Evans C
(2023)
Marine nutrient subsidies promote biogeochemical hotspots in undisturbed, highly humic estuaries
in Limnology and Oceanography

Jones E
(2022)
Carbon and nutrient cycling in Antarctic landfast sea ice from winter to summer
in Limnology and Oceanography

Langbehn T
(2023)
Visual predation risk and spatial distributions of large Arctic copepods along gradients of sea ice and bottom depth
in Limnology and Oceanography

Meredith M
(2022)
Underwater ice boosts production of the world ocean's densest waters
in Science Advances
Title | LILICOP_1.0: model of LIpids in the LIfe cycle of a high latitude COPepod, version 1.0 |
Description | LILICOP_1.0 is version 1.0 of a stoichiometric model of the life-cycle of high latitude copepods (marine zooplankton), used to study the role of lipids in the life history of these animals, and associated carbon sequestration in the ocean. The associated published journal article is: Anderson, T.R., Hessen, D.O., Gentleman, W.C., Yool, A. and Mayor, D.J. (2022). Quantifying the roles of food intake and stored lipid for growth and development throughout the life cycle of a high-latitude copepod, and consequences for carbon sequestration. Frontiers in Marine Science, doi: 10.3389/fmars.2022.928209. The model is coded stand-alone in R (no libraries required). The main executable is LILICOP_1.0.R, with input files LILICOP_1.0parms.txt (model parameters), LILICOP_1.0extra.txt (model settings), mike_forcing.txt (forcing for Station Mike), India_forcing.txt (forcing for Station India). |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2022 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |
Impact | N/A |
URL | https://zenodo.org/record/6615006 |
Title | Macronutrient, temperature and salinity measurements made around the island of South Georgia and the wider Scotia Sea, the Antarctic Peninsula, and in the Bellingshausen Sea between 1980 and 2009 |
Description | Between 1980 and 2009, marine macronutrient concentrations (silicate, Si(OH)4-Si; phosphate, PO4-P; nitrate, NO3-N; ammonium, NH4-N; and nitrite, NO2-N) and concurrent temperature and salinity were measured by British Antarctic Survey researchers as part of an integrated ecosystem investigation. Areas sampled included South Georgia and the wider Scotia Sea, around the Antarctic Peninsula, and in the Bellingshausen Sea. The data were collected from aboard the RRS John Biscoe or the RRS James Clark Ross during all months of the year with the exceptions of May and June. Samples were collected from CTD water bottles (vertical profiles) to maximum depth of 5400 m, and by monitoring continuously the ship's non-toxic seawater supply (intake at 6 - 7 m) while the vessel was transecting. Analyses were performed immediately aboard ship and logged to computer while full data analysis was performed post-cruise using custom written software programmes. The data collection was enabled through Natural Environment Research Council National Capability funding to the British Antarctic Survey. This was organised through a series of BAS programmes including the Offshore Biological Research programme, the DYNAMOE programme and the ECOSYSTEMS programme. Data creation was facilitated through a combination of NERC funding for Antarctic Logistics and Infrastructure (ALI) Science and the NERC Science Multi-Centre Round 2 (NCSM2) programme BIOPOLE (NE/W004933/1). |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2022 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |
Impact | Not applicable |
URL | https://data.bas.ac.uk/full-record.php?id=GB/NERC/BAS/PDC/01648 |