Carbon Fixation, Transformation and Sequestration of Marine Microbes and the Associated Regulatory Mechanisms in a Changing Ocean

A special issue of Biology (ISSN 2079-7737). This special issue belongs to the section "Marine Biology".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 31 December 2024 | Viewed by 1577

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
School of Oceanography, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 200240, China
Interests: phytoplankton physiology; phytoplankton ecology; marine biogeochemistry; marine coccolithophores; oceanic nitrogen fixation; global climate change

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Guest Editor
1. MNR Key Laboratory of Marine Ecosystems and Biogeochemistry (LMEB), The Second Institute of Oceanography (SIO), Ministry of Natural Resources (MNR), Hangzhou 310012, China
2. State Key Laboratory of Satellite Ocean Environment Dynamics (SOED), The Second Institute of Oceanography (SIO), Ministry of Natural Resources (MNR), Hangzhou 310012, China
Interests: oceanic primary production; phytoplankton photosynthesis; marine biology; CO2 utilizes technology

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Marine microbes, as major primary producers in the marine environment, function as biological pumps and, thus, have a central place in the global carbon cycle, regulating the climate by sequestrating atmospheric CO2 into the ocean. On one hand, these organisms directly fix inorganic carbon into organic forms through photosynthesis, forming the basis of the marine food web and regulating life at higher trophic levels. On the other hand, the fixed carbon is transformed by various microbial processes, affecting the amount of carbon that is eventually sequestrated into the deep ocean. In general, the dominance of large phytoplankton groups controls the net export production out of the euphotic zone, due to the higher sinking rates caused by gravity and the packing effects of larger grazers forming them into fecal pellets. Alternatively, the small phytoplankton cells mainly contribute to the carbon export through aggregation and packaging effects. The sinking velocities are not only affected by the physiological states of the phytoplankton cells (e.g., bio-molecular compositions) but also by microbial interactions (e.g., microbial loop), which may have large effects on the formation of marine aggregates and the consequent carbon export. However, our current knowledge of the carbon sequestration capacity of different phytoplankton taxonomic groups and the associated environmental and microbial regulatory mechanisms are still limited, which is essential for the precise estimation of the carbon sequestration potential of the ocean to achieve “carbon neutrality”.

This Special Issue aims to report recent advances in understanding the role marine microbes play in the carbon fixation, transformation, and sequestration in the oceanic environment, the effects of global change on these processes, and the associated regulatory mechanisms using advanced/interdisciplinary techniques. Authors are invited to submit both original research articles and reviews related to these research topics.

Dr. Yuanyuan Feng
Dr. Qiang Hao
Guest Editors

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Keywords

  • marine microbes
  • phytoplankton
  • carbon sequestration
  • carbon transformation
  • carbon fixation
  • marine carbon cycle
  • global change

Published Papers (1 paper)

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Research

15 pages, 6628 KiB  
Article
Ocean Acidification Affects the Response of the Coastal Coccolithophore Pleurochrysis carterae to Irradiance
by Fengxia Wu, Jia Guo, Haozhen Duan, Tongtong Li, Yanan Wang, Yuntao Wang, Shiqiang Wang and Yuanyuan Feng
Biology 2023, 12(9), 1249; https://doi.org/10.3390/biology12091249 - 18 Sep 2023
Viewed by 1179
Abstract
The ecologically important marine phytoplankton group coccolithophores have a global distribution. The impacts of ocean acidification on the cosmopolitan species Emiliania huxleyi have received much attention and have been intensively studied. However, the species-specific responses of coccolithophores and how these responses will be [...] Read more.
The ecologically important marine phytoplankton group coccolithophores have a global distribution. The impacts of ocean acidification on the cosmopolitan species Emiliania huxleyi have received much attention and have been intensively studied. However, the species-specific responses of coccolithophores and how these responses will be regulated by other environmental drivers are still largely unknown. To examine the interactive effects of irradiance and ocean acidification on the physiology of the coastal coccolithophore species Pleurochrysis carterae, we carried out a semi-continuous incubation experiment under a range of irradiances (50, 200, 500, 800 μmol photons m−2 s−1) at two CO2 concentration conditions of 400 and 800 ppm. The results suggest that the saturation irradiance for the growth rate was higher at an elevated CO2 concentration. Ocean acidification weakened the particulate organic carbon (POC) production of Pleurochrysis carterae and the inhibition rate was decreased with increasing irradiance, indicating that ocean acidification may affect the tolerating capacity of photosynthesis to higher irradiance. Our results further provide new insight into the species-specific responses of coccolithophores to the projected ocean acidification under different irradiance scenarios in the changing marine environment. Full article
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