Satellite Study Shows Drop In Ocean's Plankton Level
An anonymous reader submits: "CNN reports there seems to be a dramatic drop in N. hemishpere phytoplankton and a net overall decline in the ocean's overall phytoplankton population. This has very serious implications for the overall food chain and also the scrubbing of CO2 in the atmosphere."
Additional information on the spacecraft that made these observation is available on the SeaWiFS site.
on.
But, the plankton can't all dies off. Once it's all gone, then what are we going to make this yummy new soylent green stuff out of?
Here's the original press release from NASA. The actual journal article, in Geophysical Research Letters, is not available on the Web to nonsubscribers.
Note, though, an important sentence in the NASA release that is missing from the CNN account:
"Also, summer plankton concentrations rose by over 50 percent in both the Northern Indian and the Equatorial Atlantic Oceans since the mid-80s. Large areas of the Indian Ocean showed substantial increases during all four seasons."
There's still a net loss, but the real phenomenon appears to be a shifting of phytoplankton from north to south.
Unfortunatly this is not a quick change. This is a gradual decline since the 1980's.
This is a very scary thing. I remember my bio teacher in high school saying that the plankton were responsible for the majority of the co2 -> 02 conversions. They also feed fish and whales. If they continue to drop, we may soon have dead lifeless oceans. I'm not trying to sound like a fear monger, but...
IIRC
Plankton is sensitive to ultraviolet rays (in the "it kills it" sense), with all the talk of ozone layers and holes in the recent years, I wonder if this might be related.
You can't take the sky from me...