Researchers from the Arctic Research Programme, managed at British
Antarctic Survey, have shown for the first time that phytoplankton
(plant life) in remote ocean regions can contribute to rare airborne
particles that trigger ice formation in clouds.
Results published today in the journal Nature show
that the organic waste from life in the oceans, which is ejected into
the atmosphere along with sea spray from breaking waves, stimulates
cloud droplets to freeze into ice particles. This affects how clouds
behave and influence global climate, which is important for improved
projections of future climate change.
Clouds in the Earth’s
atmosphere are made of liquid water droplets, ice particles or a mixture
of both. Ice particles affect how long a cloud exists and how much
rain, hail or snow it produces. They also help control temperature of
the climate by reflecting sunlight (keeping surface temperatures cool)
or trapping heat close to the Earth’s surface (keeping temperatures
warmer). Climate in the polar regions is changing more rapidly than any
other part of the planet, yet predictions for how it will change in
future remain uncertain.
This improved understanding of cloud formation is a step closer to helping reduce uncertainties in global climate modelling.
An
international team of researchers investigated marine life from the
biological ecosystem in the Arctic Ocean, Western Atlantic and North
Pacific by collecting biological matter using a remote controlled boat
launched from research ships, along with hand held sampling equipment.
By combining these direct measurements with global computer modelling
scenarios of the atmosphere, the team found that airborne particles from
sea spray were most influential in polar and other remote ocean
regions.
Dr Theo Wilson, lead author from University of Leeds says:
“Breaking
waves in the ocean generate large quantities of airborne sea spray.
Some sea spray particles contain biological material linked to the
ocean’s ecosystem. It has been speculated in the past that some of this
biological material may trigger the formation of ice in clouds – making
them ‘ice nucleating particles’ (INPs) in the atmosphere. Now we have
clear evidence that marine biological material such as matter exuded
from phytoplankton is able to nucleate ice and could do so in the
atmosphere. This could be particularly important in the polar regions.”
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