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Details of Award

NERC Reference : NE/X008649/1

Fish gut carbonates and the control of ocean alkalinity

Grant Award

Principal Investigator:
Professor RW Wilson, University of Exeter, Biosciences
Co-Investigator:
Professor C Perry, University of Exeter, Geography
Co-Investigator:
Professor A Watson, University of Exeter, Geography
Science Area:
Atmospheric
Marine
Overall Classification:
Unknown
ENRIs:
Environmental Risks and Hazards
Global Change
Natural Resource Management
Science Topics:
Marine carbonates
Sediment/Sedimentary Processes
Biogeochemical Cycles
Ecosystem Scale Processes
Ocean - Atmosphere Interact.
Abstract:
The global oceans currently absorb ~30% of anthropogenic CO2 emissions. The carbon cycle that regulates this ocean-atmosphere CO2 exchange, and the associated vertical distribution of dissolved carbon and alkalinity that influences the ocean's absorption capacity, depends on several processes. These are described as a series of interacting "pumps": a physical/chemical solubility pump; a biological 'soft tissue' pump; and a calcium carbonate pump. Understanding these three pumps, how they interact, and their atmospheric CO2 feedbacks is especially critical for accurate predictions of how the marine carbon cycle and global climate will change in the future. Calcium carbonate is a white, chalky mineral produced by a range of marine organisms. Importantly, when it dissolves it increases the alkalinity of seawater, which can reduce the seawater CO2 concentration below atmospheric CO2 levels and 'suck' anthropogenic CO2 from the atmosphere. Knowing exactly where it dissolves (how near the ocean surface) is therefore key to understanding the role this calcium carbonate pump plays in regulating ocean chemistry and atmospheric CO2. The operation of the calcium carbonate pump not only depends on the production rate but also the types of carbonate minerals that are produced by marine organisms, the rate at which they sink, and how rapidly these carbonate minerals then dissolve. Most ocean carbon cycle models make the assumption that carbonate production is dominated by the plankton and coccolithophores (microscopic algae). However, we now know that very large amounts of carbonate are excreted by marine bony fish (teleosts). This carbonate, which we now also know is mineralogically diverse depending on the fish species, is continuously produced in the intestines of fish and excreted as waste. The potential significance of this process to the marine CaCO3 pump was recognised in an initial modelling exercise led by PI Wilson (Science, 2009) which conservatively suggested that fish may account for at least 3-15% of total marine CaCO3 production globally, and realistically as much as 45%. Since that first modelling exercise the science behind this process has advanced hugely. As a group (and through the work of others) we now know that fish produce a hugely diverse range of carbonate mineral types, which existing knowledge would suggest should dissolve at very different rates. As a result, the assumptions in the first modelling efforts that fish produce uniform and relatively soluble carbonate types are no longer valid. Whilst we can already address some of the knowledge gaps, there is little or no data for fish from families that comprise ~94% of global fish biomass - including almost no data for mesopelagic fish that alone account for at least 60% of fish biomass. The daily vertical migration of their immense biomass is hypothesised to drive a novel "upward alkalinity pump", which may provide an important offset to the downward transport of alkalinity driven by other established processes. Also, we now have good evidence to show that production rates by fish vary with metabolic rate (which is greatest in the globally significant active epipelagic fishes), and importantly also depending upon feeding and diet (especially the calcium content of the diet). Thus, again, necessary assumptions in early models that all fish produce carbonate at the same rate are no longer realistic to use for modelling. Over and above these issues we also have little to no data on the rates at which these carbonates sink in the oceans or dissolve. The aim of this project is therefore to deliver new empirical data on fish carbonate production, mineralogies, solubilities and sinking rates to inform the first spatially- and mineralogically-resolved global production estimates, thus enabling us to parameterise models assessing fish contributions to the marine carbon cycle both under present day conditions, and for climate change scenarios in the future.
Period of Award:
3 Aug 2022 - 13 Sep 2024
Value:
£201,991
Authorised funds only
NERC Reference:
NE/X008649/1
Grant Stage:
Awaiting Event/Action
Scheme:
Directed (RP) - NR1
Grant Status:
Active
Programme:
BIO Carbon

This grant award has a total value of £201,991  

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FDAB - Financial Details (Award breakdown by headings)

DI - Other CostsIndirect - Indirect CostsDA - InvestigatorsDA - Estate CostsDI - StaffDA - Other Directly AllocatedDI - T&S
£13,410£62,034£13,254£21,442£54,506£31,659£5,686

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