Meet MBARI: Exploring plankton, poop, and other parts of the deep-sea carbon cycle

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  • Опубликовано: 4 июн 2024
  • A day at the office looks very different for MBARI researchers.
    For us, the “office” is Monterey Bay and its deep submarine canyon. This is our window to the world ocean. Studying our blue backyard is revealing our connection to the ocean-how it sustains us, and how our actions on land may be threatening its future. Our scientists and engineers are driven by a curiosity to learn more about the ocean and a passion to protect its future. Get an insider’s look at their work with our new Meet MBARI series.
    In celebration of International Day of Women and Girls in Science, we’re joining MBARI Scientist Colleen Durkin to learn how poop, snot, and dead plankton can curb climate change.
    Colleen leads MBARI’s Carbon Flux Ecology team. The group studies how deep-sea ecosystems transform sinking particles as part of the ocean carbon cycle. The rain of organic matter from the ocean’s surface to the abyssal seafloor helps lock carbon away from the atmosphere. Using cutting-edge cameras and other innovative tools developed in partnership with MBARI’s engineers, Colleen and her team are learning more about this critical link in Earth’s carbon cycle. Learn more about their work: www.mbari.org/team/carbon-flu...
    MBARI’s mission is to advance marine science and engineering to understand a changing ocean. In the months ahead, we’ll spotlight other research teams at MBARI and showcase the diverse ways we’re working to better understand the largest environment on Earth and hopefully inspire a new generation of ocean explorers to join our work in the future.
    Production team: Heidi Cullen, Madeline Go, Kyra Schlining, Nancy Jacobsen Stout, Susan von Thun
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Комментарии • 7

  • @zakariazaki7513
    @zakariazaki7513 Год назад

    Thanks for video keep going 🤠 greeting from Morocco

  • @WildBillCox13
    @WildBillCox13 Год назад +5

    A professional Scatologist . . . I sing scat, but it's not the same thing, ;-)

    • @franknblunt
      @franknblunt Год назад

      Scat, feces, excretion, detritus, coprolite, ... it's all technically 'crap'😁an rather odd side with WA Mozart, scatological humor, some try include that as mental disorder but then as now some people are harmlessly silly & weird even for shock value considering the haughty stuffy courtly protocol-ridden immaculate seemingly oppressive imposed structure he was immersed😁

  • @WildBillCox13
    @WildBillCox13 Год назад +1

    Shared.

  • @selimgure
    @selimgure Год назад +3

    "A Doctor of Poop," who would've thought!

  • @LettersAndNumbers300
    @LettersAndNumbers300 Год назад +3

    I wanna like this like I always do for MBARI…but I’m worried about my future recommendations…

  • @ourcommonancestry6025
    @ourcommonancestry6025 Год назад +2

    I love the channel; i just want to see deep sea critters though. I don;t want global warming, I don;t want to know a single person, just octopi and critters. I try to just string up all the shows and see how long i can smile.. cuz critters are awesome... people, not so much. Please, although the people at MBARI are awesome, I just want endless deep sea critter streaming.