Scientists scour global waters testing plankton and pollution

globaltimes2022-12-06  105

After a near 2-year "Microbiome" mission around the world, scientists said on Saturday they had gathered thous…

After a near 2-year "Microbiome" mission around the world, scientists said on Saturday they had gathered thousands of samples of marine ­microorganisms in a bid to better understand ocean plankton and pollution.

The survey was carried out from the 33-year-old Tara research schooner, which returned to her home port of Lorient on France's western coast at the weekend.

From Chile to Africa, via the Amazon and the Antarctic, nearly 25,000 samples were collected over the 70,000-­kilometer route.

"All this data will be analyzed," Tara Ocean Foundation director Romain Trouble told a press conference. "Within 18 months to two years we will start to have the first discoveries from the mission."  

At the base of the food chain, microorganisms were the "invisible people of the sea," accounting for two-thirds of marine biomass, said Trouble.

"They capture atmospheric CO2 [carbon dioxide] and supply half of the oxygen we breathe."

Trouble said the mission sought to find out how it all works.

The team paid particular attention to the impact on the oceans of the River Amazon, which has a water flow rate of 200 million liters per second.

They wanted to test a theory that deforestation and the spread of agriculture has increased nitrate fertilizer discharge, leading to an abundance of toxic algae along river banks and coasts, particularly in the Caribbean.

The 22-month odyssey also sought to trace the sources of plastic pollution at river mouths, to understand distribution and the types of material involved.



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