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Resolving Biological carbon Export in the Labrador Sea (ReBELS)

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

Abstract

The surface ocean is home to billions of microscopic plant-like phytoplankton which produce organic matter in the surface ocean using sunlight and carbon dioxide. When they die, they sink and take this carbon into the deep ocean, where it is stored on timescales of hundreds to thousands of years. This storage helps to keep our climate the way it is today. This process of biological CO2 uptake and storage in the deep ocean is called the 'biological carbon pump' and, in order to understand how our climate will change in the near future, we need to understand what controls this process. Until fairly recently, the biological carbon pump was thought to work almost independently from the mixing processes that occur in the oceans, such as during storms, winter or by meandering ocean currents. However, recent work suggested that these physical processes may be very important for the biological carbon pump, providing a direct pathway for carbon to reach the deep ocean, and can contribute as much carbon to depth as the sinking of dead matter alone. Therefore, we urgently need to understand how the biological and physical processes interact to transport organic matter into the deep ocean.

Two reasons explain this clear oversight: Physical and biological oceanographers often work independently, so that crossdisciplinary processes can get overlooked. In addition, the location where, and times when, these processes have the most dramatic effect on ocean carbon storage are hostile environments to work in, with very high waves and strong winds that make working from ships nearly impossible. ReBELS is an exciting programme that will bring together physical and biological oceanographers to closely work together on the biological carbon pump. To overcome the logistical challenges, ReBELS will take advantage of the recent developments in technology, using state-of-the-art marine autonomous robots that will be able to sample the ocean at times where we cannot do so with ships. Our study site will be the Labrador Sea in the Northwest Atlantic. There, organic carbon stays in the deep ocean much longer than anywhere else in the world (>1000 years). Moreover, the Labrador Sea has been identified as a very important location for the climate, as it is strongly affected by increasing temperatures and melting ice.

Using autonomous technology, we will measure the biological carbon pump over the course of an entire year, and quantify carbon transport and carbon storage through the different biological and physical processes. To do so, we will measure the distribution of organic matter particles throughout the water column and determine whether they are sinking or being transported by ocean mixing. We will then extend our results to the entire Northwest Atlantic using proxies that can be determined on larger scales (for example from satellites). Finally, we will work with modellers to include these important processes when predicting climate in the future.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Roundtable discussion on UK-Greenland collaboration 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The roundtable discussion was organised by the British Embassy in Copenhagen during the RRS James Cook port call in Nuuk, Greenland.
It involved presentations from
- the embassy about UK-Greenland science cooperation
- Jo Hopkins (NOC Arctic lead) about high level presentation of the NOC research in the Arctic
- ReBELS PI Filipa Carvalho on the project objectives and collaboration opportunities with the Greenlandic community
- Royal College of Arts on existing and future plans for engagement with local communities

The remaining session was an open dialogue to understand Greenland's perspective's on International cooperation and research synergies with NOC and the ReBELS project. It involved personnel from Arctic Hub, Greenlandic Government and Greenlandic researchers.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2024
URL https://noc.ac.uk/news/rrs-james-cook-welcomes-greenland-community-ahead-ambitious-research-expediti...
 
Description Tour of RRS James Cook and the ReBELS-1 expedition 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an open day or visit at my research institution
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact During a port call in Nuuk, the RRS James Cook and the British Embassy in Copenhagen organised an 'open house' event where the public was invited to have a tour of the ship and talk to the scientists on board for the upcoming ReBELS cruise. ReBELS scientists were actively engaged in showing the labs and communicating the important science being addressed in the project as well as explaining the curtting-edge technology to be deployed during the cruise. A total of 160 visitors (from the Greenlandic community, locals to Nuuk, government officials, researchers, and international tourists), which corresponds to 1% of Nuuk's population visited the ship and engaged with the project researchers. It gave us the opportunity to discuss pressing issues like climate change that are heavily affecting local populations.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2024
URL https://noc.ac.uk/news/rrs-james-cook-welcomes-greenland-community-ahead-ambitious-research-expediti...