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Global ocean sinking carbon flux and variability

Lead Research Organisation: National Oceanography Centre
Department Name: Science and Technology

Abstract

The long-term storage of carbon in the deep ocean by sinking particles is a key piece of the global carbon cycle, playing a critical role in setting atmospheric CO2 levels, driving ocean de-oxygenation, and delivering food to deep ocean ecosystems. The aim of GLOBESINK is to improve our ability to answer the big question: "How will storage of carbon by sinking ocean particles change in the future?". The answer could have wide-reaching impacts on climate, fisheries, and biodiversity. GLOBESINK will attack this big question using a new "big data" approach. The first step will be to dramatically increase the number of sinking particle flux measurements in the ocean, by approximately 10-fold. GLOBESINK will achieve this by applying its own innovative statistical methods to 10s of millions of particle measurements made by a new global fleet of over 200 drifting underwater robots. Using this new dataset, GLOBESINK will directly calculate the total global carbon stored and how this amount has varied in time and space over the past decade. This information will be combined with key measurements of particle size, rate of particle breakup, temperature, and oxygen concentration, all hypothesised to be important drivers of carbon storage, in order to assess whether and how these drivers should be included in global climate models.
 
Description GLOBESINK used data from long-lived autonomous underwater robots to create a new global dataset tracking the rate at which ocean ecosystems store carbon in the deep ocean.

GLOBESINK identified two major drivers of variability in this storage:
1) The concentration of microscopic organic matter generated in the upper ocean (living and dead)
2) The average size of microscopic organic particles generated in the surface ocean
3) The rate at which sinking organic matter breaks up into smaller particles
Exploitation Route The new global dataset is already in use by other researchers in order to help explain both local-scale and global-scale patterns in both carbon storage and oxygen consumption in the oceans. The dataset also provides a critical baseline in order to track future changes in ocean carbon storage. The dataset can be useful to improve understanding of the global carbon cycle and its influence on climate, as well as global patterns in the delivery of food to deep ocean ecosystems.
Sectors Environment

 
Description Atlantic Climate and Environment Strategic Science (AtlantiS)
Amount £41,363,000 (GBP)
Funding ID NE/Y005589/1 
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 03/2024 
End 03/2029
 
Description Integrating Drivers of Atlantic Productivity (IDAPro)
Amount £504,637 (GBP)
Funding ID NE/Y004612/1 
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 11/2023 
End 10/2026
 
Description PARTITRICS: PARTIcle Transformation and Respiration Influence on ocean Carbon Storage
Amount £1,438,618 (GBP)
Funding ID NE/Y004612/1 
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 11/2023 
End 10/2026