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Sugar brings a lot of car­bon di­ox­ide into the deeper sea

Mar 18, 2020

The oceans are a very important reservoir for carbon in the system of the earth. However, many aspects of the marine carbon cycle are still unknown. Scientists from Bremen and Bremerhaven now found out that sugar plays an important role in this process. At the same time, the sweet energy source is important for the ecosystem of the oceans.

 

Coscinodiscus wailesii is a microalgae belonging to the diatoms, which form algal blooms and produce substantial amounts of polysaccharides in energy stores, cell walls and as exudates. The research group Marine Glycobiology studies the turnover and role of these glycans in the carbon cycle. (© Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology/ C. Robb)
Coscinodiscus wailesii is a microalgae belonging to the diatoms, which form algal blooms and produce substantial amounts of polysaccharides in energy stores, cell walls and as exudates. The research group Marine Glycobiology studies the turnover and role of these glycans in the carbon cycle. (© Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology/ C. Robb)

In the sun­lit sur­face layer of the ocean, pho­to­syn­thetic mi­croal­gae such as di­at­oms con­vert more car­bon di­ox­ide into bio­mass than Earth’s trop­ical forests. Like land plants, di­at­oms se­quester car­bon di­ox­ide into poly­meric car­bo­hydrates – in other words: into long-chained sug­ars. However, it has proven dif­fi­cult to quantify how much car­bon di­ox­ide can be stored in the global oceans throughout this pro­cess.

This gap of know­ledge sparked the in­terest of the re­search group Mar­ine Gly­cobi­o­logy, which is loc­ated at the Max Planck In­sti­tute of Mar­ine Mi­cro­bi­o­logy and the MARUM, Cen­ter for Mar­ine En­vir­on­mental Sci­ences at the Uni­versity of Bre­men and co­oper­ates with the Al­fred We­gener In­sti­tute for Po­lar and Mar­ine Re­search. To close this gap, the sci­ent­ists util­ized a re­cently de­veloped en­zymatic as­say to dis­sect pho­to­syn­thetic mi­croal­gae and meas­ure con­cen­tra­tions of the long-chained sugar lam­in­arin, an im­port­ant en­ergy source for mi­croal­gae in­clud­ing di­at­oms.

Lam­in­arin fixes car­bon di­ox­ide

Algae samples from deeper water of the Arctic ocean layers were gained by using these in-situ-pumps (© Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology/ S. Becker)
Algae samples from deeper water of the Arctic ocean layers were gained by using these in-situ-pumps (© Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology/ S. Becker)

Based on mi­croal­gae ob­tained from the Arc­tic, At­lantic, and Pa­cific Oceans and the North Sea, the re­search­ers es­tim­ated that this bio­mass is on av­er­age com­posed of 26 per­cent lam­in­arin. “This amount sug­gests that pho­to­syn­thesis in the sur­face ocean pro­duces on av­er­age twelve gigatons of car­bon an­nu­ally in the form of algal lam­in­arin” says Stefan Becker, first au­thor of the study, pub­lished in the sci­entific journal PNAS in March 2020. “This is a large amount, con­sid­er­ing that, ac­cord­ing to the Global Car­bon Budget 2019, hu­mans re­leased 11.5 gigatons of car­bon dur­ing 2018.” However, only a small part of the car­bon bound by lam­in­arin is per­man­ently re­moved from the at­mo­sphere – a large part is sub­sequently re­leased again through nat­ural pro­cesses. In total, the oceans per­man­ently ab­sorbed around 2.6 gigatons of car­bon in 2018. “Yet, our find­ings in­dic­ate that sug­ars like lam­in­arin are also im­port­ant for the per­man­ent fix­a­tion of car­bon in the sea,” says Becker.

Fur­ther­more the sci­ent­ists found that lam­in­arin com­prises as much as 50 per­cent of the or­ganic car­bon in sink­ing di­atom-con­tain­ing particles. “Thus lam­in­arin plays a cent­ral role in car­bon trans­fer from sur­face wa­ters to the deeper ocean,” says Jan-Hendrik Hehem­ann, leader of the re­search group Mar­ine Gly­cobi­o­logy. “Whether lam­in­arin is fixed in deep wa­ters is an im­port­ant fur­ther ques­tion that we will ad­dress in the fu­ture”.  

Vari­ation dur­ing the day

In ad­di­tion, as mi­croal­gae rep­res­ent the all-im­port­ant base of the mar­ine food web, the find­ings show that lam­in­arin oc­cu­pies a prom­in­ent po­s­i­tion in global ocean eco­logy. The re­search­ers from Bre­men found out, that the amount of sugar in mi­croal­gae is high, but not al­ways the same. “The con­cen­tra­tion in algal cells in­creased markedly dur­ing the day and de­creased over the night, in ana­logy to the sea­sonal stor­age of en­ergy in starchy roots and fruits of land plants”, says Hehem­ann. “This may have a ma­jor im­pact on the feed­ing be­ha­vior of mar­ine an­im­als, as the time of day de­term­ines how much sugar – and there­fore en­ergy – an­im­als get when they eat.”

Col­lect­ively, these find­ings high­light the prom­in­ent eco­lo­gical role and bio­chem­ical func­tion of the sugar lam­in­arin in the ocean.

 

Ori­ginal pub­lic­a­tion

Stefan Becker, Jan Tebben, Sarah Coffinet, Karen Wilt­shire, Morten Hvit­feldt Iversen, Tilmann Harder, Kai-Uwe Hin­richs, Jan-Hendrik Hehem­ann: Laminarin is a major molecule in the marine carbon cycle. PNAS, March 2020

DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1917001117

Par­ti­cip­at­ing in­sti­tu­tions

  • Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Bremen, Germany
  • MARUM, Cen­ter for Mar­ine En­vir­on­mental Sci­ences at the Uni­versity of Bre­men, Ger­many

  • Al­fred We­gener In­sti­tute for Po­lar and Mar­ine Re­search, Bremer­haven, Ger­many

Please dir­ect your quer­ies to:

Group leader

MARUM MPG Bridge Group Marine Glycobiology

Dr. Jan-Hendrik Hehemann

MPI for Marine Microbiology
Celsiusstr. 1
D-28359 Bremen
Germany

Room: 

2126

Phone: 

+49 421 2028-7360

Dr. Jan-Hendrik Hehemann
 
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