It is rather bad news when a long
accepted core piece of data turns out to not just be in error but also to be
profoundly wrong. It means that all the models depending on the original dispensation are in dire need of major revision. This typically takes years to
work its way through.
A good comparable was the Carbon
14 adjustment brought about by tree rings.
It turned archeology on its head and most texts prior to the mid sixties ended up been grossly wrong. We are
still adjusting. That is why I beat
1159BC and 1179BC to death. They are
independently confirmed.
This implies a sharp increase in
the carbon uptake of the Oceans in all our modeling work. Just the preliminary work of correcting our
models will take at least a couple of years.
Yet its accuracy was central to our global warming debate.
Ocean plankton sponge up nearly
twice the carbon currently assumed
Models of carbon dioxide in the world's oceans need to be revised, according to new work by UC Irvine and other scientists published online Sunday in Nature Geoscience. Trillions of plankton near the surface of warm waters are far more carbon-rich than has long been thought, they found.
Global marine temperature fluctuations could mean that tiny
Prochlorococcus and other microbes digest double the carbon previously
calculated. Carbon dioxide is the leading driver of disruptive climate change.
In making their findings, the researchers have upended a decades-old
core principle of marine science known as the Redfield ratio, named for famed
oceanographer Alfred Redfield. He concluded in 1934 that from the top of the
world's oceans to their cool, dark depths, both plankton and the materials they
excrete contain the same ratio (106:16:1) of carbon, nitrogen and phosphorous.
But as any gardener who has done a soil test knows, amounts of those
elements can vary widely. The new study's authors found dramatically different
ratios at a variety of marine locations. What matters more than depth, they concluded, is latitude. In particular, the researchers detected far higher levels of carbon in warm, nutrient-starved areas (195:28:1) near the equator than in cold, nutrient-rich polar zones (78:13:1).
"The Redfield concept remains a central tenet in ocean biology and chemistry. However, we clearly show that the nutrient content ratio in plankton is not constant and thus reject this longstanding central theory for ocean science," said lead author Adam Martiny, associate professor of Earth system science and ecology and evolutionary biology at UC Irvine.
"Instead, we show that plankton follow a strong latitudinal pattern."
He and fellow investigators made seven expeditions to gather big jars
of water from the frigid Bering Sea, the North Atlantic near Denmark , mild Caribbean
waters and elsewhere. They used a sophisticated $1 million cell sorter aboard
the research vessel to analyze samples at the molecular level. They also
compared their data to published results from 18 other marine voyages.
Martiny noted that since Redfield first announced his findings, "there have been people over time putting out a flag, saying, 'Hey, wait a minute.'" But for the most part, Redfield's ratio of constant elements is a staple of textbooks and research.
In recent years, Martiny said, "a couple of models have suggested otherwise, but they were purely models. This is really the first time it's
been shown with observation. That's why it's so important."
Funding for the work was provided by the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Energy and the UCI Environment Institute. Fellow authors are Chau Pham, Francois Primeau, Jasper Vrugt and Keith Moore of UC Irvine; Simon Levin of Princeton University and UC Irvine; and Michael Lomas of the Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences.
1 comment:
This is further evidence that the Global Warming Theory is a hoax. When CO2 levels in the atmosphere rise, plants -- all plants -- happily inhale the bounty and grow faster, and *absorb the excess CO2*. This also explains why the mean temperature of the Earth has in fact remained stable for the last 20 years.
--Leslie <;)))>< Fish
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