They may be tiny, but collectively plant (phyto) and animal (zoo) plankton play an important role in the global carbon cycle.
Phytoplankton capture the sun's energy and atmospheric CO2 at the ocean's surface, and are eaten by zooplankton, which make this energy available to larger animals such as fish and whales who feed on them. Both phytoplankton and zooplankton play a key role in exporting this CO2 from the surface to the deepest depths.
This NIWA voyage—led by Dr. Moira Decima and NIWA scientists in partnership with multiple international collaborators—starting on 23 October 2018, will focus on the special role salps play in carbon cycling, and where they fit in marine food webs off the New Zealand coast. Salps are jelly-like marine animals, shaped like barrel, that combine swimming with moving by pumping water through a feeding filter. They play a unique ecological and biogeochemical role as extensive grazers of some of the smallest marine phytoplankton. The SalpPOOP (Salp and Particle expOrt Ocean Production) voyage will an exciting scientific enterprise!
Salps can form lengthy colonies that bloom across thousands of square kilometres, and effectively clear most of the particles in the water in which they live, transporting large amounts of organic material (including their poop and dead salp carcasses) rapidly to deep ocean zones.
There are some important questions scientists hope to answer through the TAN1810 voyage objectives:
- How exactly do salp blooms change carbon flows through the ecosystem and how can we quantify this?
- Do salp blooms significantly alter the tight growth/grazing relationship between phytoplankton and micrograzers?
- Are salps a link or a sink for carbon transfer in the upper water column?
While salps role in exporting carbon is well recognised, finding salp blooms when they are only seasonally present, and found in patches, will be a challenge for the researchers on board the R.V.Tangaroa while off the Canterbury coast, and across the Chatham Rise.
Voyage researchers will report on their salp sampling and findings regularly, and hopefully answer a number of other planktonic puzzles along the way. Also on the voyage will be several Blake Ambassadors who will be involved in the salp research, and will report on life onboard the RV Tangaroa.
TAN1810 voyage map
The course of RV Tangaroa taken during the voyage; blog posts have an orange "i" marker. Dates and times detailed are UTC, 13 hours behind NZ daylight time.
Voyage updates
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NIWA/Blake Ambassadors Blog 1
24 October 2018: NIWA Blake Ambassadors Lana Young and Siobhan O'Connor report back -
Timelapse: Different nets for different depths
27 October 2018. The NIWA Blake Ambassadors shoot a 12 hour time lapse from the cutaway deck on the RV Tangaroa. -
The Year of the Salps project
Students at Leigh School have been working with marine scientists and the 'Year of the Salps' project partners to learn how to count sea salps, understand salp life cycle phases and the importance of salps in marine ecosystems and their carbon-cycling effects on climate change. -
TAN1810 Voyage partners, collaborators and funders
Who is involved in the TAN1810 SalPOOP voyage?