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Researchers track how iron deficiency disrupts photosynthesis in crucial ocean algae

Researchers track how iron deficiency disrupts photosynthesis in crucial ocean algae
In a daily pre-sunrise task, workers on the RRS Discovery lower a sensing instrument into the Southern Atlantic Ocean. Credit: Heshani Pupulewatte

The next time you breathe, consider this: Photosynthesis of algae, powered by iron dust in the ocean, made it possible.

Now, a Rutgers University study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences pulls back the curtain on this vital process.

Iron is a critical micronutrient for , the microscopic algae that form the foundation of the ocean's . It is deposited into the world's oceans as dust from deserts and arid areas as well as from glacial meltwater.

"Every other breath you take includes oxygen from the ocean, released from phytoplankton," said Paul G. Falkowski, the Bennett L. Smith Chair in Business and Natural Resources at Rutgers-New Brunswick and a co-author of the study. "Our research shows that iron is a limiting factor in phytoplankton's ability to make oxygen in vast regions of the ocean."

When iron is absent or reduced, photosynthesis—the process of turning light energy into chemical energy, with oxygen as a byproduct—is slowed or halted. This limits the growth of these organisms and affects how efficiently they capture sunlight and remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

Evidence suggests is altering patterns of ocean circulation and reducing iron deposition, Falkowski said. While humans can still breathe easily—reduced iron levels in the world's oceans won't mean that humans will suffocate—the trend could have significant effects on marine life, he said.

"Phytoplankton are the primary source of food for krill, the microscopic shrimp that are the main source of food in the Southern Ocean for virtually every animal, including penguins, seals, walruses and whales," Falkowski said. "When drop and the amount of food available for these upper-level animals is lower, the result will be fewer of these majestic creatures."

Researchers track how iron deficiency disrupts photosynthesis in crucial ocean algae
Heshani Pupulewatte (at right in yellow hard hat) collects water samples measuring conductivity, temperature and depth on a research ship in the Southern Atlantic Ocean. Credit: Brandy Robinson / GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel

Researchers have long suspected that iron is crucial to photosynthesis, but little is known about how the process is affected in nature. Most previous studies have been conducted only in the laboratory.

To address this gap, Heshani Pupulewatte, a graduate research assistant in the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology conducting research in Falkowski's lab and lead author of the study, spent 37 days in 2023 and 2024 aboard a British research vessel sailing through the South Atlantic Ocean and Southern Ocean, covering a transect from the South African coast to the marginal ice zone of the Weddell Gyre and back.

Using custom fluorometers built by Max Gorbunov from the Falkowski Lab on Cook Campus in New Brunswick, Pupulewatte tested samples for fluorescence—a measure of energy re-released by phytoplankton when the photosynthesis process breaks down. She then added nutrients to samples collected along the route to determine whether doing so could restart the photosynthesis process.

"We wanted to know what really happens to the energy transfer process at the molecular level of phytoplankton in natural environments," she said.

What she found was that iron limitation causes up to 25% of light-harvesting proteins to become "uncoupled" from the energy-producing centers, effectively reducing energy conversion. When iron is resupplied, phytoplankton reconnect their internal light-harvesting systems, improving their efficiency and potential for growth.

"We demonstrated the results of iron stress on out in the ocean, without even bringing back samples to the lab to perform molecular extractions using fluorescence measurements carried out at sea," she said. "By doing so, we were able to show that much more energy is wasted in fluorescence when iron is limited."

Understanding how influences photosynthesis at the could help scientists predict future ocean productivity and global carbon cycles, she added.

More information: Heshani Pupulewatte et al, Coupling of excitation energy to photochemistry in natural marine phytoplankton communities under iron stress, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025).

Provided by Rutgers University

Citation: Researchers track how iron deficiency disrupts photosynthesis in crucial ocean algae (2025, August 14) retrieved 15 August 2025 from /news/2025-08-track-iron-deficiency-disrupts-photosynthesis.html
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