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#coldwater

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Did you know that #coldwater #corals are important components of the marine #carbon cycle? Cool study recently out in @EGU_BioGeo shows how impactful they are as a carbon sink.
bg.copernicus.org/articles/22/

bg.copernicus.orgCold-water coral mounds are effective carbon sinks in the western Mediterranean SeaAbstract. Cold-water corals (CWCs) build biogenic structures, known as CWC mounds, that can store large amounts of carbon(ate). However, there is a lack of quantification studies on both recent as well as geological timescales, and knowledge is limited to the accumulation of carbonate (i.e. the inorganic carbon fraction), which ignores the organic carbon fraction. This hinders the calculation of total carbon accumulation rates and a wider understanding of the role CWC mounds play in the carbon cycle. Here, we investigated two cores retrieved from CWC mounds in the Alborán Sea, western Mediterranean Sea, comprising a ∼ 400 kyr record of carbon accumulation. We calculated the accumulation of both inorganic and organic carbon within the CWC mounds. Further, we analysed the same parameters in two cores from the adjacent seafloor (∼ 120 kyr record) to compare the mound records with the surrounding sedimentary deposits. Our results show that the CWC mounds studied accumulate up to 15 g C cm−2 kyr−1, of which 6 %–9 % is derived from the organic carbon fraction. Moreover, during mound formation phases, the mounds store up to 14–19 times more carbon than the adjacent seafloor deposits. We suggest that there is a selective enrichment of organic carbon on the mounds, with about an order of magnitude higher organic carbon accumulation rates than on the adjacent seafloor. Consequently, in phases of mound formation, CWC mounds can be effective local sinks of both inorganic and organic carbon on geological timescales.

Visited Folly Cove for the first time in a few months and found a nice variety of different nudi species. We saw a couple Ancula gibbosa, a few Ananthodoris pilosa, and even an Onchidoris muricata. My favorite find of the dive was a large mysis shrimp that I followed for a bit and managed to photograph in the water column. Nice dive!

Dive number: 667
Date / time: Mon Dec 9, 2024 10:15 AM
Dive site: Folly Cove, Massachusetts
Water Temperature: 45F
Bottom Time: 1h4m

Met up with a buddy for a morning dive at Folly. The visibility was great, but we just didn't find a whole heck of a lot. A few rim-backed nudis, some moon snails, some anemones, and not much else.

I found this fifteen-scaled worm at Canoe Beach in Nahant, Massachusetts this week. I've seen this species on numerous occasions, but they are usually crawling through dense seaweed and are difficult to photograph. This one appeared to be hunting amphipods on the rock (you can see two in the foreground slightly out of focus) and I think I even saw it grab one.

I just added a new blog post with a gallery of tropical creatures I have found in New England waters! It was a lot of fun going through the images and collecting them for this post. I will continue to add to it over time as I find more.

blog.briangweber.com/2024-11-0

blog.briangweber.comNew England Tropical VisitorsEvery year, tropical fish get swept up the east coast by currents and storms

Kind of a quiet dive on October 11 at Folly Cove. We entered around mid-tide with no issues due to sand covering all of the tricky rocks. We saw some gunnels, a striper carcass being cleaned up crabs and lobsters, a few pipefish, and a puffer who was NOT interested in being photographed. Water temps were just fine, but the air + wind were chilly, so it's officially dry suit season for me.