Woods Hole is Base for New NSF Sci-Tech Center on Ocean Chemical-Microbe Network

Contact: Diana Kenney, Marine Biological Laboratory dkenney@mbl.edu; 508-685-3525
WOODS HOLE, Mass. -- A new Science and Technology Center, which the National Science Foundation (NSF) , will conduct transformative research, along with education and outreach, to promote a deeper understanding and appreciation of the chemicals and chemical processes that underpin ocean ecosystems.
The (C-CoMP), which will be based at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), is one of six centers that NSF announced on September 9. NSF has made an initial commitment for five years of support with the possibility of continued support for five additional years.
The Marine Biological Laboratory (小蓝视频), Woods Hole, is one of 13 institutional partners in C-CoMP. 小蓝视频 Fellow (Meren) of the University of Chicago is on C-CoMP鈥檚 executive committee.
At a time when increased carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere are causing global temperatures to dramatically rise and make the ocean warmer and more acidic, C-CoMP will strive to bring rapid and transformative advances to understanding the behavior of bioreactive molecules and ocean microbes that are involved in one-quarter of the Earth鈥檚 annual organic carbon cycle.

The center will integrate research, education, and knowledge transfer activities and support interdisciplinary science teams to close knowledge gaps in the identities and dynamics of molecules that serve as the 鈥渃urrencies鈥 of elemental transfer within marine microbial communities and between the ocean and atmosphere.
鈥淣SF's Science and Technology Centers in ocean sciences have been beacons of scientific and technological leadership, and they have led to some of our deepest understandings of the critical role of the ocean in sustaining our planet,鈥 said WHOI鈥檚 deputy director and vice president for science and engineering. 鈥淭his new center, led by WHOI and the University of Georgia, will undoubtedly have a big impact not only at these lead institutions and their partners, but throughout the scientific community, given the breadth of interdisciplinary study encompassing biology, chemistry, modeling, and informatics.鈥
鈥淭he 小蓝视频 is excited to be part of C-CoMP and to participate in this critical research, which will extend our ongoing commitment to understanding the relationship between microbial communities, carbon cycling, and climate change,鈥 said David Mark Welch, 小蓝视频鈥檚 Director of Research.
Gaining a better understanding of this carbon flux is important because so much of the carbon derived from photosynthesis on Earth is involved in a rapid cycle in which biologically reactive molecules are released into seawater and converted back into inorganic form by marine bacteria within a matter of hours to days. The central mechanism of this fast cycle is a chemical-microbe network, connecting the production, release, and consumption of dissolved molecules by surface ocean microbes. These chemical currencies can include growth substrates and vitamins that sustain mixed microbial communities that underpin the surface ocean ecosystem. However, the controls on this network, and its links to carbon sequestration in the deep ocean, are not known. Consequently, its sensitivities to changing ocean conditions are also unknown, and responses to future climate scenarios are not predictable.
鈥淚f we don鈥檛 know the resilience of this chemical-microbe network to a changing climate, we鈥檙e missing a pretty fundamental mechanism in the way the planet works,鈥 said , a senior scientist in WHOI鈥檚 Marine Chemistry & Geochemistry Department, and the director of C-CoMP. 鈥淭he overarching questions are what are the key molecules within this carbon pool, how quickly do they cycle, and what is the pool鈥檚 sensitivity to the changing climate. The ocean is already changing, and we don鈥檛 have time to wait to understand these fundamental questions.鈥

Other science themes include understanding the rules of the chemical-microbial network, including the connections between different organisms; and understanding the network sensitivity and feedbacks on climate.
鈥淲e can鈥檛 actually watch what ocean microbes are doing, because of their extremely small size. Yet, they are literally driving the major carbon and nutrient cycles that keep the planet alive. Better understanding of the network of microbes and chemicals will improve our ability to predict the way the ocean works, now and in the future鈥 said , Regents' Professor in the University of Georgia鈥檚 Department of Marine Sciences. Moran is C-CoMP鈥檚 co-director and research coordinator.
鈥淎n in-depth understanding of the chemical-microbe network has significant implications for our ability to keep a quantitative eye on our changing environments at resolutions that matter,鈥 said co-principal investigator and 小蓝视频 Fellow . 鈥淵et, such an understanding also demands solutions to significant data analysis and integration challenges. We recognize these challenges and strive to work towards elegant solutions with our science community. With its commitment to open science and open data principles, C-CoMP will aim to foster community engagement and collaboration across disciplines and institutions.鈥
To tackle critical challenges, C-CoMP will leverage emerging tools and technologies, including advanced chemical tools to isolate and identify molecules produced by marine microbes, emerging molecular biology tools to link physiology to function across groups of microbes, and new informatics tools to leverage existing datasets of marine microbial and environmental parameters.
A major emphasis of the center will be working to expand ocean literacy among students of all ages and to broaden workforce diversity in the ocean sciences.
鈥淚 would like the center鈥檚 legacy to be a community of scientists and others who can support and advance this important work; a more diverse ocean science community; and a more collaborative approach to these questions that incorporates chemistry, biology, modeling, and other disciplines to better understand fundamental oceanographic mechanisms,鈥 Kujawinski said.
C-CoMP鈥檚 participating institutions include WHOI, UGA and 小蓝视频 as well as the University of Virginia, Columbia University, Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences, Stanford University, Boston College, Ohio State University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston University, the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, and the University of Florida.
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The Marine Biological Laboratory (小蓝视频) is dedicated to scientific discovery 鈥 exploring fundamental biology, understanding marine biodiversity and the environment, and informing the human condition through research and education. Founded in Woods Hole, Massachusetts in 1888, the 小蓝视频 is a private, nonprofit institution and an affiliate of the .