Tiny animals such as zooplankton make the world’s biggest migration—from feeding at the open ocean’s surface at night to hiding in sunless depths during the day.
Their daytime ammonia output—the equivalent of urination—has a surprisingly big role in marine chemistry, particularly in low-oxygen zones.
A study on the finding appears online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
“I’m very fascinated by these massive migrations,” says lead author Daniele Bianchi, a postdoctoral researcher in the UW School of Oceanography. “To me, it’s exciting to think about the effects of animal behavior on a large scale in the ocean.”
One might not think that peeing into the vastness of the oceans could have an effect. But the animals—which include tiny zooplankton, crustaceans such as krill, and fish such as lanternfish up to a few inches long—compensate for their small size with huge abundance throughout the world’s oceans.
After a nighttime feast near the surface, these small creatures take a couple of hours to swim about 650 to 2,000 feet (200 to 600 meters) deep. Solid waste falls as pellets. The liquid waste is emitted more gradually.
Low-oxygen zones
In earlier work, Bianchi made the surprising finding that the animals spend most of their day in low-oxygen water. Marine bacteria consume oxygen as they decompose sinking dead material, creating low-oxygen zones a few hundred feet below the surface.
“The animals really seem to stop in low-oxygen regions, which is sort of puzzling,” Bianchi says. Some speculated these zones might protect them from larger predators.
The earlier study also showed that animals actually contribute to these low-oxygen zones by using the little remaining oxygen to breathe.
Marine chemistry
For the new study, authors mined data from underwater sonar surveys to calculate how many animals are migrating to which depths, and where. Next they gauged the combined effect of their daytime digestion.
Results show that in certain parts of the ocean, ammonia released from animals drives a big part of the oxygen-free conversion of ammonium and other molecules to nitrogen gas, a key chemical transition.
“We still think bacteria do most of the job, but the effect of animals is enough to alter the rates of these reactions and maybe help explain some of the measurements,” Bianchi says.
Inside low-oxygen zones, it’s still mysterious how bacteria turn so much nitrogen-based ammonia into tight pairs of nitrogen atoms, like those found in air, which cannot be used by plants or animals. The conversion is important because it determines how much nitrogen-based fertilizer remains to support life in the world’s oceans.
Researchers typically model low-oxygen zones using factors such as ocean currents, weather, and bacterial growth. The new paper, Bianchi says, shows that diving animals, though more difficult to model, also play a role in marine chemistry.
The ocean’s low-oxygen zones are projected to expand under climate change, as warmer waters hold less oxygen and decrease oxygen content below the surface. Understanding these zones is thus important for predicting what might happen to the oceans under climate change.
The Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, the Canadian Foundation for Innovation, and the US National Science Foundation funded the work. Coauthors are Andrew Babbin at Princeton University and Eric Galbraith at Canada’s McGill University.
Source: University of Washington
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