James,
As I understand it, there are 2 cases for the problem with the issue of nutrient robbing:
Consequently, given the timescales involved, it is impractical to study nutrient robbing other than by modelling and, given the present understanding of ocean currents at a detailed level, this is subject to large uncertainties.
You asked “Has such ecological research been done regarding any natural sources of iron fertilization of any part of the ocean?” The answer is yes, there have been several studies – see these papers:
Blain, S. et al. (2008) Effect of natural iron fertilization on carbon sequestration in the Southern Ocean, Nature, 446, 1070–1074, https://doi.org/10.1038/nature05700.
Blain, S. et al (2008) Distribution of dissolved iron during the natural iron-fertilization experiment KEOPS (Kerguelen Plateau, Southern Ocean), Deep-Sea Res. Pt. II, 55, 594–605, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2007.12.028.
Blain, S. et al. (2015) Distributions and stoichiometry of dissolved nitrogen and phosphorus in the iron-fertilized region near Kerguelen (Southern Ocean), Biogeosciences, 12, 623–635, https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-12-623-2015.
Gerringa, L. J. A. et al. (2012) Iron from melting glaciers fuels the phytoplankton blooms in Amundsen Sea (Southern Ocean): Iron biogeochemistry, Deep-Sea Res. Pt. II, 71–76, 16–31, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2012.03.007.
Morris, P. J. and Charette, M. A. (2013) A synthesis of upper ocean carbon and dissolved iron budgets for Southern Ocean natural iron fertilisation studies, Deep-Sea Res. Pt. II, 90, 147–157, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2013.02.001 .
Pollard, R. T. et al. (2009) Southern Ocean deepwater carbon export enhanced by natural iron fertilization, Nature, 457, 577–580, https://doi.org/10.1038/nature07716.
Best wishes
Chris.
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Chris, here’s a great recent paper on blooms caused by subsurface iron fertilization from the Hunga Tonga volcano.
Thomas J. F. Goreau, PhD
President, Global Coral Reef Alliance
Chief Scientist, Blue Regeneration SL
President, Biorock Technology Inc.
Technical Advisor, Blue Guardians Programme, SIDS DOCK
37 Pleasant Street, Cambridge, MA 02139
gor...@globalcoral.org
www.globalcoral.org
Skype: tomgoreau
Tel: (1) 617-864-4226 (leave message)
Books:
Geotherapy: Innovative Methods of Soil Fertility Restoration, Carbon Sequestration, and Reversing CO2 Increase
http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781466595392
Innovative Methods of Marine Ecosystem Restoration
http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781466557734
Geotherapy: Regenerating ecosystem services to reverse climate change
No one can change the past, everybody can change the future
It’s much later than we think, especially if we don’t think
Those with their heads in the sand will see the light when global warming and sea level rise wash the beach away
“When you run to the rocks, the rocks will be melting, when you run to the sea, the sea will be boiling”, Peter Tosh, Jamaica’s greatest song writer
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Consequently, given the timescales involved, it is impractical to study nutrient robbing other than by modelling and, given the present understanding of ocean currents at a detailed level, this is subject to large uncertainties.
You asked “Has such ecological research been done regarding any natural sources of iron fertilization of any part of the ocean?” The answer is yes, there have been several studies – see these papers:
GUEST ESSAY
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Time series of satellite-derived chlorophyll-a concentration (Chl, a proxy of phytoplankton biomass), continuously generated since 1997, are still too short to investigate the low-frequency variability of phytoplankton biomass (e.g. decadal variability). Machine learning models such as Support Vector Regression (SVR) or Multi-Layer Perceptron (MLP) have recently proven to be an alternative approach to mechanistic ones to reconstruct Chl synoptic past time-series before the satellite era from physical predictors. Nevertheless, the relationships between phytoplankton and its physical surrounding environment were implicitly considered homogeneous in space, and training such models on a global scale does not allow one to consider known regional mechanisms. Indeed, the global ocean is commonly partitioned into biogeochemical provinces (BGCPs) into which phytoplankton growth is supposed to be governed by regionally-”homogeneous” processes. The time-evolving nature of those provinces prevents imposing a priori spatially-fixed boundary constraints to restrict the learning phase. Here, we propose to use a multi-mode Convolutional Neural Network (CNN), which can spatially learn and combine different modes, to globally account for interregional variabilities. Each mode is associated with a CNN submodel, standing for a mode-specific response of phytoplankton biomass to the physical forcing. Beyond improving performance reconstruction, we show that the different modes appear regionally consistent with the ocean dynamics and that they may help to get new insights into physical-biogeochemical processes controlling phytoplankton spatio-temporal variability at global scale.
On Sep 16, 2023, at 8:21 AM, James Bowery <jabo...@gmail.com> wrote:
Now that "The Newspaper of Record" has permitted its platform to open the can of worms I fully expect everyone to go insane rather than taking seriously the scientific challenge of applying the vast quantities of sensor data, raw information processing power and human intelligence to modeling the causal structure of global ecology.
What it comes down to is this:
The Algorithmic Information Criterion for model selection has been known to be the optimal one since the 1960s, but its lack of popularity among scientists combined with the inconvenience of applying it to resolving scientific controversies over causality in complex systems has deprived the world of a fundamental advance in the scientific method applicable under Moore's Law's explosion of information processing power.
The way it would work is simply this:
Let otherwise-sane scientists, who are going insane because of some hot topic in complex systems modeling, submit specific sensor datasets to be included in a unified corpus. Then challenge the scientific community to come up with the smallest executable archive of said unified dataset.
Ray Solomonoff proved in the 1960s that if the universe is structured in such a manner as to be predictable by the application of computation, that the most-predictive data-driven model is the one embodied by the smallest executable archive of all of the data in evidence.THAT WAS OVER A HALF CENTURY AGO DURING WHICH DATA AND INFORMATION PROCESSING HAS EXPLODED.I really feel like the character played by Jane Curtin in "Theodoric of York: Medieval Barber" except my outrage is better expressed as "You've killed my entire planet!"
On Sat, Sep 16, 2023 at 9:03 AM James Bowery <jabo...@gmail.com> wrote:
Speak of the devil:
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/14/opinion/geoengineering-climate-change-ocean.htmlGUEST ESSAYIron Dust Could Reverse the Course of Climate ChangeSept. 14, 2023
On Wednesday, September 13, 2023 at 5:03:58 PM UTC-5 James Bowery wrote:
Ocean iron fertilization is increasingly being considered as an approach to geoengineering. So there _should_ be increasing data-driven (say Granger Causality) testing of hypotheses regarding externalities utilizing. Are there?
I recall back in the 1990s reading about concerns that iron fertilization in one place could, by causing biomass production there, deplete nutrients that would ordinarily have supported ecosystems to which those nutrients would otherwise flow.
It seems to me these concerns should, by now (nearly 30 years later), have resulted in some studies of naturaliron fertilization events, such as dust storms in the Sahara in some years, and absence of such storms in other years.
Were there subsequent decreases of primary productivity in areas not fertilized by the Sahara dust when the fertilized areas increased in primary productivity? During years when the Sahara dust was reduced, hence iron fertilization was reduced, was there an increase in primary productivity in areas outside those that experience an increase during years with iron fertilization from Sahara dust storms?
Has such ecological research been done regarding any natural sources of iron fertilization of any part of the ocean?
There is a wealth of ocean chlorophyll data spanning decades.
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James:I’m glad you are keeping this topic alive. Thanks.There is a more recent approach to topics like this than Solomonoff.
Your comment below is a false mystery:
Soon after an OIF event triggers a bloom, the nitrogen should be consumed and the bloom should die. But often the bloom continues.
The bloom continues as long as the nitrogen and phosphorus are internally remineralized and recycled within the photic zone before finally taking a deep dump to the bottom.
Gordon Riley was the first to show this that the carbon wheel could spin many, many times for each input of new nitrogen and phosphorus from upwelling based on year round field work on phytoplankton blooms at Yale in the late 1940s and later at Dalhousie.
Thomas J. F. Goreau, PhD
President, Global Coral Reef Alliance
Chief Scientist, Blue Regeneration SL
President, Biorock Technology Inc.
Technical Advisor, Blue Guardians Programme, SIDS DOCK
37 Pleasant Street, Cambridge, MA 02139
gor...@globalcoral.org
www.globalcoral.org
Skype: tomgoreau
Tel: (1) 617-864-4226 (leave message)
Books:
Geotherapy: Innovative Methods of Soil Fertility Restoration, Carbon Sequestration, and Reversing CO2 Increase
http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781466595392
Innovative Methods of Marine Ecosystem Restoration
http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781466557734
Geotherapy: Regenerating ecosystem services to reverse climate change
No one can change the past, everybody can change the future
It’s much later than we think, especially if we don’t think
Those with their heads in the sand will see the light when global warming and sea level rise wash the beach away
“When you run to the rocks, the rocks will be melting, when you run to the sea, the sea will be boiling”, Peter Tosh, Jamaica’s greatest song writer
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/CarbonDioxideRemoval/7804f0a2-84f8-4ffc-a840-eb92e2e005adn%40googlegroups.com.
Alessandro Tagliabue and Benjamin S. Twining contributed equally.
Climate change scenarios suggest that large-scale carbon dioxide removal (CDR) will be required to maintain global warming below 2°C, leading to renewed attention on ocean iron fertilization (OIF). Previous OIF modelling has found that while carbon export increases, nutrient transport to lower latitude ecosystems declines, resulting in a modest impact on atmospheric CO2. However, the interaction of these CDR responses with ongoing climate change is unknown. Here, we combine global ocean biogeochemistry and ecosystem models to show that, while stimulating carbon sequestration, OIF may amplify climate-induced declines in tropical ocean productivity and ecosystem biomass under a high-emission scenario, with very limited potential atmospheric CO2 drawdown. The ‘biogeochemical fingerprint’ of climate change, that leads to depletion of upper ocean major nutrients due to upper ocean stratification, is reinforced by OIF due to greater major nutrient consumption. Our simulations show that reductions in upper trophic level animal biomass in tropical regions due to climate change would be exacerbated by OIF within ~20 years, especially in coastal exclusive economic zones (EEZs), with potential implications for fisheries that underpin the livelihoods and economies of coastal communities. Any fertilization-based CDR should therefore consider its interaction with ongoing climate-driven changes and the ensuing ecosystem impacts in national EEZs.
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Kevin,
You should also take a look at this paper by Eelco Rohling and particularly the section ‘Debunking Frequently Encountered Statements/Arguments’ towards the end of the paper:
Marine methods for carbon dioxide removal: fundamentals and myth-busting for the wider community - https://academic.oup.com/oocc/article/3/1/kgad004/7135823
The 6 statements covered are:
By the way, the Ocean Iron Fertilization Alliance website appears to be infected with a virus.
Chris.
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PhD's are so driven to publish papers that they use badly construed modeling to do so. And in the process they harm the efforts to fund real experiments that would give the modelers the data that they need to create accurate models. They harm the efforts to restore our climate and reverse climate change.
Kevin, I believe this is exactly what the GESAMP did when it relied on the 2015 paper be Kwiatkowski et al. to rule out Thermodynamic Geoengineering claiming to cool surface waters could effectively
reduce warming associated with climate change but implemented at a large scale such effects would be temporary, regionally heterogeneous and present the type of termination risks usually associated with solar geoengineering approaches. Large scale deployment of OTEC heat pipes for purposes of thermodynamic geoengineering would be potentially disruptive to the marine environment considering that, by definition, it would significantly reduce sea surface temperatures on a regional scale while having all the same localized environmental impacts as conventional OTEC.
Which is patently false. The Kwiatkowski paper modelled a vertical diffusivity in the top 1000 m of the water column at a rate of 60 cm2 s-1. Whereas Thermodynamic Geoengineering would actually upwell heat, not water, at a rate of 1 cm/day. In other words, over less than 1//5,000,000 of the rate of perturbation modelled.
IS IT ANY WONDER SHAKING UP THE TOP 1000 METERRS OF THE WATER COLUMN THIS VIGOROUGSLY WOULD RESULT 50 YEARS LATER ON IN THE WARMING OF THE AMTOSPHERE. IT WOULD EFFECTIVELY RELEASE ALL OF THE CO2 FROM THAT LAYER INTO THE ATMOSPHREE.
Furthermore the authors of this paper where admonitioned in a paper An Evaluation of the Large-Scale Implementation of Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) Using an Ocean General Circulation Model with Low-Complexity Atmospheric Feedback Effects by Jia et al that “Kwiatkowski et al. used a fully coupled (atmosphere, land, ocean and sea ice) model, the Community Earth System Model (CESM), to explore the consequences of boosting the background vertical diffusivity of the top 1000 m in the ocean by a factor of 600. They argued that the resulting disruption of the thermocline from such greatly enhanced mixing could be regarded as a proxy for the large-scale effects of technologies such as OTEC, which rely on seawater properties from different vertical layers using pipes and pumps. Although OTEC is the first word of the article, the proposed numerical experiments may not be applicable in the context of OTEC. On one hand, the upper-ocean vertical diffusivity is altered everywhere, while OTEC could only be developed in selected tropical areas, over about a third of the whole ocean. Moreover, the magnitude of the imposed upper-ocean vertical diffusivity would preclude the production of OTEC power anywhere since the vertical temperature difference available in the disrupted thermocline is only a few degrees, far shy of the 20 ◦C typically considered for OTEC feasibility.
From: carbondiox...@googlegroups.com On Behalf Of Kevin Wolf
Sent: September 17, 2023 12:16 PM
To: Carbon Dioxide Removal <CarbonDiox...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [CDR] Statistical tests of the hypothesis that iron fertilization depletes primary productivity outside fertilized regions?
Thank you James and Ken for posting these papers. It is unethical to publish hypothetical modeling that shuts down important research (e.g. OIF field experiments) if those models aren't backed up with some real evidence that the predicted harm could actually occur. There are so many naturally occurring OIF events that should deplete nutrients in an area of the ocean, surely the researchers can find evidence where OIF induced snutrient depleted area of the ocean have created harm to the fisheries in other areas of the ocean decades later. Show the evidence or rescind the paper.
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...
The Southern Ocean Deep Carbon Export phenomenon certainly must be robbing other areas of the ocean of its nutrients. Or maybe the nutrients are being restored through nitrogen fixing phytoplankton, upwelling or something else. How long has this phenomenon been occurring? When are the expected negative impacts suppose to show up? Surely the modelers can use this source or volcanic eruptions or unusual aeolean dust and fire ash events (e.g. Australia and Canada) to see what happens when iron is naturally added to the ocean. There are many events from 20-50 years ago that they should be able to use to test their modeling on. Show us that the model has a statistically valid accuracy in such predictions, and then publish your findings. Don't produce scary headlines without proof. Modeling without validation is not proof.