Why this project
Tropical and subtropical oceans cover ~60% of the global ocean surface. Until recently, they were considered inefficient for CO2 sequestration because they are nutrient-poor zones. However, these vast regions host a particular type of plankton known as "diazotrophs", which fertilize the surface ocean with nutrients. These microorganisms stimulate the marine food chain and CO2 sequestration via an alternative biological carbon pump, the importance of which was highlighted in a recent study.
How strong is this alternative carbon pump? Could these marine micro-organisms absorb more CO2 than previously thought? And thus help mitigate climate change? This is what the HOPE project "How do diazotrophs shape the ocean biological carbon pump?" will explore over 5 years, combining approaches at the interface between microbial oceanography, geochemistry and autonomous sensor technology, thanks to the intelligent profiling buoy.
Today's oceans are becoming "tropicalized", and the role of this alternative pump could become predominant in the oceans of the future. The results of the HOPE project could thus modify the climate models taken into account by the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) experts, and shape the ocean of tomorrow.