HomeDaily Current AffairsPhytoplankton biomass in Bay of Bengal

Phytoplankton biomass in Bay of Bengal

  • Researchers have discovered way to measure the quantity of chlorophyll-a in the Bay of Bengal — a dominant pigment found in phytoplankton cell and present in a few areas of the ocean — in real-time.
  • The research was carried out by a team of scientists from the Indian National Centre for Ocean Information Services (INCOIS).
  • Phytoplanktons are tiny microscopic plants found in the ocean.
  • They are important ecological indicators that regulate life in ocean.
  • They have chlorophyll to capture sunlight, and use photosynthesis to turn it into chemical energy.
  • They consume carbon dioxide and release oxygen.
  • All phytoplankton photosynthesise, but some get additional energy by consuming other organisms.
  • Phytoplanktons contribute to more than half of the oxygen that we breathe.
  • That apart, they influence our climate by absorbing human-induced carbon dioxide, a heat-trapping greenhouse gas.
  • They also serve as the foundation of the aquatic food web.
  • The study was based on in-situ and satellite data spanning over the last 16 years.
  • They observed significant increase of chlorophyll-a concentration during pre-southwest monsoon seasons.
  • The other parameters studied were total suspended matter (TSM) and coloured dissolved organic matter (CDOM), which are optically active substances in water.
  • There were two peaks of chlorophyll-a —
    • the primary peak occurred during the pre-southwest monsoon due to the recurrent phytoplankton bloom in the coastal water;
    • the secondary peak occurred during the end of the southwest monsoon, spreading to far offshore areas.
  • Apart from phytoplankton bloom contributing to this increase of chlorophyll-a in nearshore waters, the study found physical forces such as
    • upwelling, wind-induced vertical mixing,
    • convective overturn and
    • Local circulation pattern influenced the peaks by supplying dissolved chemical input from various sources including river / terrigenous runoff.
  • Though such trends could tell an overall improved health status of the ecosystems as a whole, they could be detrimental to ocean health because of eutrophication.
  • Land run-off that deposits an excess of nutrients from agricultural land to the coastal waters facilitates growth of harmful algal blooms at a large scale.
  • These algal blooms deplete the oxygen level in water, disrupting the ocean ecosystem. As a result, oceanic fauna such as fish assemblages are badly affected.
  • This leads to decline in fish catch.
  • Like terrestrial plants, the eco-friendly phytoplankton is largely dependent on light, temperature and nutrients.

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