Date: 6/05/2022 06:39:40
From: monkey skipper
ID: 1880127
Subject: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

There Are Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean, And We’ve Only Just Found Out

Hidden below the waves, the ocean contains vast reserves of sugar that we never were aware of, according to new research.

Seagrasses on the ocean floor.

Scientists have discovered that seagrass meadows on the ocean floor can store huge amounts of the sweet stuff underneath their waving fronds – and there are major implications for carbon storage and climate change.

The sugar comes in the form of sucrose (the main ingredient of sugar used in the kitchen), and it’s released from the seagrasses into the soil underneath, an area directly affected by the roots, known as the rhizo­sphere. It means seabed sugar concentrations are some 80 times higher than they would be normally.

Worldwide, seagrasses could be sitting on up to 1.3 million tons of sucrose, the research team says. To put it another way, that’s enough for about 32 billion cans of Coca-Cola, so we’re talking about a substantial find of hidden sugar.

“Seagrasses pro­duce sugar dur­ing photosynthesis,” says marine microbiologist Nicole Dubilier from the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology in Germany.

“Un­der average light conditions, these plants use most of the sug­ars they pro­duce for their own meta­bol­ism and growth. But un­der high light con­di­tions, for ex­ample at mid­day or dur­ing the sum­mer, the plants pro­duce more sugar than they can use or store. Then they re­lease the excess sucrose into their rhizosphere. Think of it as an over­flow valve.”

What’s surprising is that this excess sugar isn’t gobbled up by microorganisms in the surrounding environment. To stop this, it seems seagrasses send out phenolic compounds in the same way as many other plants do.

These chemical compounds – found in red wine, coffee, and fruit, as well as many other places in nature – are antimicrobials that inhibit the metabolism of most microorganisms, slowing them down.

The researchers tested out their hypothesis in an actual underwater seagrass field to confirm that this is indeed what was happening, via a mass spectrometry technique.

Studying seagrasses on the seafloor.

“In our ex­per­i­ments we ad­ded phen­olics isol­ated from seagrass to the mi­croor­gan­isms in the seagrass rhizo­sphere,” says marine microbiologist Maggie Sogin from the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology.

“And in­deed, much less sucrose was con­sumed com­pared to when no phenolics were present.”

A small set of microbes actually thrived on the sucrose despite the presence of phenolics: the researchers think that these “microbial specialists” are perhaps giving something back to the seagrass in return, like nutrients they need to grow.

Seagrasses are some of the planet’s most important sinks for blue carbon (carbon captured by the world’s ocean and coastal ecosystems): an area of seagrass can suck up twice as much carbon as a forest of the same size on land, and 35 times as fast too.

When it comes to calculating carbon capture loss from the seagrass meadows – among the most threatened habitats on the planet due to human activity and decreasing water quality – scientists can now factor in the sucrose deposits as well as the seagrass itself.

“We do not know as much about seagrass as we do about land-based hab­it­ats,” says So­gin.

“Our study con­trib­utes to our un­der­stand­ing of one of the most crit­ical coastal hab­it­ats on our planet, and high­lights how im­port­ant it is to pre­serve these blue car­bon eco­sys­tems.”

The research has been published in Nature Eco­logy & Evol­u­tion.

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Date: 6/05/2022 09:33:40
From: Bubblecar
ID: 1880150
Subject: re: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

Surprising, ta.

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Date: 6/05/2022 09:39:56
From: Michael V
ID: 1880153
Subject: re: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

Reference to the article:

https://www.sciencealert.com/there-are-mountains-of-sugar-buried-in-the-ocean-and-we-re-only-just-learning-about-it

And the scientific paper:

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-022-01740-z

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Date: 6/05/2022 09:44:23
From: Michael V
ID: 1880155
Subject: re: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

Michael V said:


Reference to the article:

https://www.sciencealert.com/there-are-mountains-of-sugar-buried-in-the-ocean-and-we-re-only-just-learning-about-it

And the scientific paper:

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-022-01740-z

The work they did was on a Mediterranean seagrass – Posidonia oceanica. I wonder whether the same thing occurs with our local seagrass. The stuff dugongs feed on.

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Date: 6/05/2022 09:54:06
From: roughbarked
ID: 1880158
Subject: re: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

Michael V said:


Michael V said:

Reference to the article:

https://www.sciencealert.com/there-are-mountains-of-sugar-buried-in-the-ocean-and-we-re-only-just-learning-about-it

And the scientific paper:

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-022-01740-z

The work they did was on a Mediterranean seagrass – Posidonia oceanica. I wonder whether the same thing occurs with our local seagrass. The stuff dugongs feed on.

Would be interesting to find out.

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Date: 6/05/2022 10:27:00
From: Cymek
ID: 1880169
Subject: re: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

roughbarked said:


Michael V said:

Michael V said:

Reference to the article:

https://www.sciencealert.com/there-are-mountains-of-sugar-buried-in-the-ocean-and-we-re-only-just-learning-about-it

And the scientific paper:

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-022-01740-z

The work they did was on a Mediterranean seagrass – Posidonia oceanica. I wonder whether the same thing occurs with our local seagrass. The stuff dugongs feed on.

Would be interesting to find out.

Could be energy dense foodstuff for them, I wonder if its a quick rush of energy to get them going in the morning and then off to other foods.

Reply Quote

Date: 6/05/2022 10:33:45
From: Michael V
ID: 1880182
Subject: re: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

Cymek said:


roughbarked said:

Michael V said:

The work they did was on a Mediterranean seagrass – Posidonia oceanica. I wonder whether the same thing occurs with our local seagrass. The stuff dugongs feed on.

Would be interesting to find out.

Could be energy dense foodstuff for them, I wonder if its a quick rush of energy to get them going in the morning and then off to other foods.

It’s their main food source. Dugongs are almost entirely vegetarian. They eat the roots of the seagrass, so it could well be that they get energy from seagrass sugars.

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Date: 6/05/2022 10:35:04
From: Cymek
ID: 1880184
Subject: re: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

Michael V said:


Cymek said:

roughbarked said:

Would be interesting to find out.

Could be energy dense foodstuff for them, I wonder if its a quick rush of energy to get them going in the morning and then off to other foods.

It’s their main food source. Dugongs are almost entirely vegetarian. They eat the roots of the seagrass, so it could well be that they get energy from seagrass sugars.

That’s what I was thinking, would make sense

Reply Quote

Date: 6/05/2022 14:19:22
From: dv
ID: 1880259
Subject: re: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

Zuckerberg means “sugar mountain”

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Date: 6/05/2022 14:29:13
From: Boris
ID: 1880262
Subject: re: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

dv said:


Zuckerberg means “sugar mountain”

I wonder if The Zuck will become the unit of measure?

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Date: 6/05/2022 15:01:20
From: Cymek
ID: 1880265
Subject: re: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

Boris said:


dv said:

Zuckerberg means “sugar mountain”

I wonder if The Zuck will become the unit of measure?

Like the Couric

Reply Quote

Date: 6/05/2022 15:03:46
From: Witty Rejoinder
ID: 1880267
Subject: re: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

Cymek said:


Boris said:

dv said:

Zuckerberg means “sugar mountain”

I wonder if The Zuck will become the unit of measure?

Like the Couric

Your pop culture references have no power here.

Reply Quote

Date: 6/05/2022 15:32:44
From: Cymek
ID: 1880273
Subject: re: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

Witty Rejoinder said:


Cymek said:

Boris said:

I wonder if The Zuck will become the unit of measure?

Like the Couric

Your pop culture references have no power here.

bah

Reply Quote

Date: 6/05/2022 15:34:38
From: sibeen
ID: 1880275
Subject: re: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

Cymek said:


Witty Rejoinder said:

Cymek said:

Like the Couric

Your pop culture references have no power here.

bah

I’m assuming Katy Couric, but no idea why.

Reply Quote

Date: 7/05/2022 19:36:38
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1880709
Subject: re: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

> It means seabed sugar concentrations are some 80 times higher than they would be normally.

That’s still not much. In the absence of sea grass the sugar concentration in the ocean is approximately zero. And 80 times zero is still zero.

Also, sea grass beds are almost always found in very shallow water. They are mainly found in bays, estuaries and coastal waters from the mid-intertidal (shallow) region down. Most species are found in shallow inshore areas.

You’d have a much larger amount of sugar in grass rhizomes from land grasses.

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Date: 7/05/2022 21:07:12
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1880726
Subject: re: Mountains of Sugar Hidden in The Ocean

A lot of sea grass around Indonesia.

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