Âé¶¹ÒùÔº

April 30, 2021

Inside the world of tiny phytoplankton: Microscopic algae that provide most of our oxygen

Credit: Monstera Production from Pexels
× close
Credit: Monstera Production from Pexels

Phytoplankton are microscopic algae living throughout the ocean's surface waters. They can't swim and are at the mercy of the currents and tides. Despite their small size, phytoplankton enable life in the oceans—and throughout the planet—to exist.

There are two types of plankton—zooplankton, which are animals, and phytoplankton, which are algae. Phytoplankton are filled with chlorophyll which gives them a green color, just like land plants. And like land plants, phytoplankton play a critical role, converting carbon dioxide and energy from the sun into food through photosynthesis, producing oxygen.

These tiny organisms have been producing oxygen for the world for hundreds of millions of years. But most people know very little about them, what they do for the rest of the world and the threats they are facing.

Phytoplankton are thought to have made an appearance in the Bible's Book of Revelation, which says: "A third of the sea turned into blood, a third of the living creatures in the sea died, and a third of the ships were destroyed." Modern scientists think this must be a reference to a , or red tide, that can be cause by phytoplankton and can discolor that water. These can also produce toxins, causing illness and even death in animals—, , , , and even —and people.

Get free science updates with Science X Daily and Weekly Newsletters — to customize your preferences!

They've made their way into modern culture, too. Alfred Hitchock's movie the Birds, where birds attack residents of a California town, was inspired by birds behaving erratically due to toxic phytoplankton.

A phytoplankton bloom seen from space. Credit: ,
× close
A phytoplankton bloom seen from space. Credit: ,

Despite being a source of cultural inspiration, there are many things about phytoplankton most people don't know—such as the fact they can be seen from space. Unlike which can grow 100 meters (380 feet) in height, phytoplankton individuals consist of a single cell. Individual phytoplankton can usually only be seen with a microscope, but when phytoplankton bloom, the aggregations are so large that they can be seen from satellites.

Although they're microscopic, phytoplankton are wonderfully diverse, with thousands (or maybe even millions) of different species and hundreds of body shapes. Some have spines or form chains to help them maintain buoyancy, while others have flagella—tiny whip-like appendages—to enable them to orient themselves in the water. Some phytoplankton are covered in CaCO₃ plates, called liths, giving them the appearance of tiny footballs, which play in carbon sequestration.

The lungs of the sea

Rainforests get much of the credit for oxygen production, but phytoplankton produce at least . Phytoplankton are the lungs of the sea—the oxygen from one out of every two breaths we take comes from plankton.

Climate change would be without phytoplankton. They use carbon dioxide from the atmosphere to fuel photosynthesis. When they die, they sink to the sea floor, locking away that carbon. Phytoplankton absorb up to , which, without them, would cause higher atmospheric COâ‚‚ levels.

Credit: AI-generated image ()
× close
Credit: AI-generated image ()

Nevertheless, climate change is causing changes . In some places, like the North Atlantic, oceans are experiencing tropicalisation—when warming waters enable warm water plankton species to move northwards while colder water species are squeezed towards the pole.

Some plankton in the North Atlantic have shifted northwards by over 1,000km (620 miles) in . Warming seas can cause some phytoplankton to change the timing of their blooms. These changes can affect , as the phytoplankton may bloom too early or late to feed the zooplankton that depend on them.

This is why it's important to monitor them. There are many ways to monitor plankton, including sampling with bottles or nets, or estimating phytoplankton biomass from space using satellites. The Continuous Plankton Recorder survey has monitored plankton in the North Atlantic since 1931, using commercial vessels such as ferries and cargo ships on their normal routes to tow a one meter long recording device through the sea behind the boat.

The devices filter seawater through a moving band of silk, trapping the plankton. The silks are then sent to a laboratory in Plymouth, UK, to identify and count the plankton. The survey has recorded almost , around 300 of which are . It's created a 90-year-old record of North Atlantic plankton, allowing us to better understand the marine food web and detect changes in the marine environment caused by pollution, fishing and .

Provided by The Conversation

Load comments (0)

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's and . have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

Get Instant Summarized Text (GIST)

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.