CBIOMES members please log in to access. Password issues contact cbiomesweb@gmail.com
April 2020 CBIOMES e-meeting – Mick Follows (MIT)
CBIOMES members please log in to access. Password issues contact cbiomesweb@gmail.com
Simons Marine Collaborations: CBIOMES
CBIOMES members please log in to access. Password issues contact cbiomesweb@gmail.com
Seeding Oceans With Iron May Not Impact Climate Change
Study involving members of MIT-CBIOMES finds Earth’s oceans contain just the right amount of iron; adding more may not improve their ability to absorb carbon dioxide. Continue reading “Seeding Oceans With Iron May Not Impact Climate Change”
Exploring Phytoplankton Diversity
In a new paper, MIT-CBIOMES investigator Stephanie Dutkiewicz and collaborators use the Darwin ecosystem model to develop theories seeking to explain and predict phytoplankton biogeography.
Continue reading “Exploring Phytoplankton Diversity”
CBIOMES Goes to Ocean Sciences 2020
Look out for members of the CBIOMES team, sharing their work at this year’s Ocean Sciences conference taking place February 16-21 in San Diego, California. Continue reading “CBIOMES Goes to Ocean Sciences 2020”
NEW CBIOMES PUBLICATION
Keisuke Inomura, Curtis Deutsch, Samuel T. Wilson, Takako Masuda, Evelyn Lawrenz, Bučinská Lenka, Roman Sobotka, Julia M. Gauglitz, Mak A. Saito, Ondřej Prášil, Michael J. Follows (2019), Quantifying Oxygen Management and Temperature and Light Dependencies of Nitrogen Fixation by Crocosphaera watsonii, mSphere, doi: 10.1128/mSphere.00531-19
Get the PDF [Requires login]
NEW CBIOMES PUBLICATION
Emily J. Zakem, Amala Mahadevan, Jonathan M. Lauderdale, and Michael J. Follows (2019), Stable aerobic and anaerobic coexistence in anoxic marine zones, The ISME Journal, doi: 10.1038/s41396-019-0523-8
Get the PDF [Requires login]
NEW CBIOMES PUBLICATION
David Talmy, Stephen J. Beckett, Darcy A.A. Taniguchi, Corina P.D. Brussard, Joshua S. Weitz, and Michael J. Follows (2019), An empirical model of carbon flow through marine viruses and microzooplankton grazers, Environmental Microbiology, doi: 10.1111/1462-2920.14626
Get the PDF [Requires login]
When Phytoplankton Go Hungry
Story by Helen Hill | CBIOMES News
The Redfield ratio, the atomic ratio of carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus (C:N:P) in phytoplankton and deep ocean waters, has often been treated as a constant 106:16:1. A new paper involving several CBIOMES co-authors presents compelling evidence for what causes this ratio to change within phytoplankton. Continue reading “When Phytoplankton Go Hungry”