NASA Satellite Detects Red Glow to Map Global Ocean Plant Health

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May 28, 2009

Steve Cole 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-0918 
stephen.e.cole@xxxxxxxx 
RELEASE: 09-124

NASA SATELLITE DETECTS RED GLOW TO MAP GLOBAL OCEAN PLANT HEALTH



WASHINGTON -- Researchers have conducted the first global analysis of 
the health and productivity of ocean plants using a unique signal 
detected by NASA's Aqua satellite. 



Ocean scientists can now remotely measure the amount of fluorescent 
red light emitted by phytoplankton and assess how efficiently these 
microscopic plants turn sunlight and nutrients into food through 
photosynthesis. Researchers also can study how changes in the global 
environment alter these processes at the center of the ocean food 
web. 

Single-celled phytoplankton fuel nearly all ocean ecosystems, serving 
as the most basic food source for marine animals. Phytoplankton 
account for half of all photosynthetic activity on Earth and play a 
key role in the balance of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. The 
health of these marine plants affects the amount of carbon dioxide 
the ocean can absorb from the atmosphere and how the ocean responds 
to a changing climate. 

"This is the first direct measurement of the health of the 
phytoplankton in the ocean," said Michael Behrenfeld, a biologist who 
specializes in marine plants at Oregon State University. "We have an 
important new tool for observing changes in phytoplankton every week, 
all over the planet." 

All plants absorb energy from the sun, typically more than they can 
consume through photosynthesis. A small fraction of this extra energy 
is re-emitted as fluorescent light in red wavelengths. 

Using the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on 
NASA's Aqua satellite, scientists have now observed "red-light 
fluorescence" over the open ocean. MODIS is the first instrument to 
observe this signal on a global scale. 

"The amount of fluorescent light emitted is not constant; it changes 
with the health of the plant life in the ocean," said Behrenfeld. 

Scientists previously used satellite sensors to track the amount of 
plant life in the ocean by measuring the amount and distribution of 
chlorophyll. 

"Chlorophyll gives us a picture of how much phytoplankton is present," 
said co-author Scott Doney, a marine chemist from the Woods Hole 
Oceanographic Institution in Woods Hole, Mass. "Fluorescence provides 
insight into how well they are functioning in the ecosystem." 

With this new measurement, the scientists discovered large areas of 
the Indian Ocean where phytoplankton were under stress from iron 
deficiency. They were surprised to see large portions of the ocean 
"light up" seasonally as phytoplankton responded to a lack of iron in 
their diet. The amount of fluorescence increases when phytoplankton 
have too little iron, a nutrient in seawater. Iron reaches the sea 
surface on winds blowing dust from deserts and other arid areas, and 
from upwelling currents. 

The research team detected new regions of the ocean affected by iron 
deposition and depletion. In the fall and winter and especially the 
summer, significant southwesterly winds over the Indian Ocean stir up 
ocean currents and bring more nutrients up from the depths for the 
phytoplankton to feed on. At the same time, the amount of iron-rich 
dust delivered by winds is reduced. 

Climate change could mean stronger winds pick up more dust and blow it 
to the sea, or less intense winds leave waters dust-free. Some 
regions will become drier and others wetter, changing the regions 
where dusty soils accumulate and get swept up into the air. 
Phytoplankton will reflect and react to these global changes. 

"On time-scales of weeks to months, we can use this data to track 
plankton responses to iron inputs from dust storms and the transport 
of iron-rich water from islands and continents," Doney said. "Over 
years to decades, we also can detect long-term trends in climate 
change and other human perturbations to the ocean." 

These findings appeared in the May edition of the journal 
Biogeosciences. For more information about NASA programs, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov 

	
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