Award: OCE-1031143

Award Title: Biogeochemical Impact and Fate of Non-phosphorus Membrane Lipids in the Sargasso Sea
Funding Source: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)
Program Manager: Donald L. Rice

Outcomes Report

Phytoplankton are microscopic creatures that live in the sunlit surface waters of the ocean. Like plants on land, phytoplankton take up carbon dioxide through photosynthesis. Since carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas, phytoplankton play a critical role in regulating Earth's climate. Our project focused phytoplankton in the Sargasso Sea, which is region where the nutrients that phytoplankton need are very scarce. One important nutrient, phosphorous, is bound in molecules called phospholipids, which are made by phytoplankton and almost all other forms of life to make the walls of cells. We found the phytoplankton in the Sargasso Sea save phosphorus by making some, but not all, of their cells walls out of non-phosphorus lipids. We hypothesized that when phytoplankton die, their phospholipids rapidly decompose, yielding phosphorus, while non-phosphorus lipid decompose slowly. We went on an oceanographic research ship to the Sargasso Sea and measured the rates of lipid degradation. Our data showed that phospholipids do indeed degrade quickly, in many cases faster than non-phosphorus lipids. This means that phospholipid degradation could be an important source of phosphorus for phytoplankton in the Sargasso Sea. This is important because we now know more about how phytoplankton are able to take up carbon dioxide in regions of the ocean where phosphorus is scarce. These regions are probably going to expand as the earth continues to warm up, so our study will help to predict the future role that phytoplankton will play in regulating Earths climate. Last Modified: 12/23/2013 Submitted by: Benjamin Van Mooy
DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
One decibar-averaged CTD profiles from R/V Atlantic Explorer cruise AE-X1103/AE1104 from the Sargasso Sea in 2011 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2011-12-13Final no updates expected
Niskin bottle basic hydrography from CTD from R/V Atlantic Explorer cruise AE1104 in the Sargasso Sea from 2011-2011 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2012-01-12Final no updates expected
Scientific sampling event log from R/V Knorr cruise KN207-01 in the southern tip of Nova Scotia to Bermuda in 2012 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2012-07-17Final no updates expected
Alongtrack data collected continuously by the ship's underway acquisition system from R/V Knorr cruise KN207-01 in the southern tip of Nova Scotia to Bermuda in 2012 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2012-07-17Final no updates expected
Niskin bottle data (including salinity, O2, temperature, conductivity, turbidity) from R/V Knorr cruise KN207-01 in the southern tip of Nova Scotia to Bermuda in 2012 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2012-11-13Final no updates expected
Inorganic nutrients (PO4, SiOH4, NO3, NO2, NH4) from R/V Knorr cruise KN207-01 from the southern tip of Nova Scotia to Bermuda in 2012 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2013-06-28Final no updates expected
Bacterial production data from R/V Knorr cruise KN207-01 along the southern tip of Nova Scotia to Bermuda in 2012 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2015-04-14Final no updates expected
Sinking POC and PIC fluxes measured with PIT sediment traps R/V Knorr cruise KN207-01 along the southern tip of Nova Scotia to Bermuda in 2012 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2015-04-15Final no updates expected
Water column (community) respiration rates from changes in DO in incubations from samples collected on R/V Knorr cruise KN207-01 along the southern tip of Nova Scotia to Bermuda in 2012 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2015-04-16Final no updates expected

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Principal Investigator: Benjamin Van Mooy (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)