Is this the most valuable thing in the ocean? - David Biello

370,278 views ・ 2024-08-20

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In 1891, newspapers reported the story of James Bartley,
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a whaler who was swallowed whole by his prey.
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Supposedly, Bartley spent as long as 36 hours in the belly of the beast
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before his crew caught the whale and rescued their crewmate.
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And this tale is far from unique.
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Various novels, myths, and religious texts depict figures swallowed at sea—
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with some even making a home for themselves
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in the creatures’ cavernous mouths.
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Unfortunately, if someone actually were swallowed by a whale,
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they would likely be crushed.
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But if they somehow survived,
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they might have a chance to escape during their captor’s bathroom break.
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Whales frequently surface to take in air
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and let out massive plumes of waste.
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And while swimming in this slurry might seem more disgusting
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than living in these creatures,
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whale poop is much more desirable than it may seem.
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In fact, it may be one of the most important substances in the ocean—
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and the world.
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To understand why,
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we need to look at some of the ocean’s most ubiquitous organisms: phytoplankton.
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These creatures survive off sunlight, carbon dioxide,
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and nutrients like phosphates, nitrogen, and iron.
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And since the ocean’s surface waters generally have an abundance
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of these resources,
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phytoplankton are everywhere.
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A single drop of seawater can contain thousands of these creatures
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and phytoplankton blooms are large enough to be seen from space.
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These phytoplankton then become food for countless microscopic grazers,
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including copepods and krill,
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which in turn feed a huge swath of marine life.
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In this way, these surface-dwellers are the base of a food chain
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supporting countless marine life forms.
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But when phytoplankton die, their bodies can sink far below the surface,
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taking with them the carbon and iron their living peers need to survive.
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And this is where whales come in.
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Hunting at these depths,
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whales consume huge amounts of these phytoplankton predators.
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For example, species like the blue whale
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can consume up to 16 tons of krill every day,
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leading them to regularly surface and release a slick of feces red with iron.
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Through this cycle,
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whales act as a living pump to bring iron from deeper waters back to the surface.
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However, if we take whales out of the equation—
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much as centuries of commercial whaling did—
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this natural system starts to break down.
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Over enough time,
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this broken cycle could lead to surface waters completely devoid of life
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and similarly major problems for us land dwellers.
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Phytoplankton’s massive photosynthetic blooms
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produce as much as half of Earth’s oxygen.
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And in addition to taking in iron,
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phytoplankton helps sequester huge amounts of carbon—
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an element we need to extract from the air to address climate change.
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According to one report, phytoplankton are estimated to capture four times
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the amount of carbon contained in the plant life of the Amazon.
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From these calculations,
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every 1% increase in phytoplankton population
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is the carbon capture equivalent of 2 billion fully grown trees
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springing into existence.
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While there’s still debate about exactly how much of this carbon
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stays in the ocean long term,
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researchers are working to increase phytoplankton populations
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and bury as much carbon as possible.
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Some groups are doing this simply by sprinkling iron in the ocean.
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However, this approach is much less impactful
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than supporting the ocean’s natural phytoplankton farmers.
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Whale poop’s complex matrix of nutrients is the result of millennia of co-evolution
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among these creatures,
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making it vastly superior to cheap, man-made supplements.
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Right now, whale populations are still recovering from industrial whaling.
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But if we can help these species rebound through whaling moratoriums,
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safer fishing and shipping practices, and cleaning up pollution,
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it would do wonders for restoring this nutrient cycle.
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And even when these newly protected whales die natural deaths,
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they'll still be fighting climate change.
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Not only can a whale’s body sequester up to 33 tons of carbon
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at the bottom of the ocean,
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but their remains can also become an entire ecosystem—
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continuing to support life both above and below the surface.
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