A USC study puts ocean microorganisms in a new light with essential implications for global warming. The said research offers a general accounting method to gauge the amount of carbon-based matter accumulating and cycling in the ocean.

While opposing notions have frequently been argued, this computational framework is reconciling the differences, not to mention explaining how oceans regulate organic carbon across time.

According to this study, surprisingly, most of the activities involving carbon take place not in the sky but under the sea instead.

Phys.org reported that the plants, oceans and mud of Earth are storing five times more carbon compared to the atmosphere. In addition, it builds up in "soil and trees, algae and sediment, microorganisms and seawater."

According to the study's senior author, Naomi Levine "The ocean is a huge carbon reservoir" with the possibility of mitigating or enhancing global warming.

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(Photo : Martin Str on Pixabay)
A computational framework scientists developed is reconciling the differences, not to mention explaining the manner oceans are regulating organic carbon across time.


'Carbon Cycling'

Levine, who's also an assistant professor in the biological department at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences added that carbon cycling is crucial for "understanding global climate" since it's setting the temperature, which in turn sets both weather and cycling patterns.

The assistant professor also said, by predicting how carbon cycling is working, there can be a better understanding of how "climate will change in the future."

Processes that govern how organic matter, "decaying plant and animal matter" in the environment similar to the material gardeners add to soil, buildups are crucial to the carbon cycle of the Earth.

Nevertheless, scientists do not have good mechanisms to predict the time and manner organic matter is piling up. That, the researchers specified in their study, is a problem since a better reconciliation of organic carbon can notify computer devices that predict global warming, as well as support public policy.

Measuring Organic Carbon Rises in the Ocean

For quite some time now, scientists have provided three contradicting theories to explain the manner organic matter is building up, and each has its own limitations.

For instance, one notion is that some organic matter is essentially prevalent, akin to an orange peel. As specified in the research, at times, "carbon is too diluted so microbes" cannot find it, as if they are attempting to find one yellow jellybean inside a jar filled with white ones.

At times too, the appropriate microbe is not the right location at the right time for the organic matter to be intercepted to environmental circumstances.

Meanwhile, while each theory explains some observations, this USC research presents how the said framework can offer a much more extensive image, not to mention explain the environmental dynamics essential for organic matter buildup in the ocean.

According to the study's co-author and postdoctoral scholar at USC Dornsife, Emily Zakem, forecasting why organic carbon is accumulating has been a challenge yet to be solved. She also said that their study presents that carbon accumulation can be predicteby usingof their computational framework.

Furthermore, the tool can also potentially be utilized to represent previous ocean conditions as a forecaster of what may be in store for this planet as it warms largely because of man-made greenhouse gas emissions.

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