Oceanography > Issues > Archive > Volume 8 > Issue 2

1995, Oceanography 8(2):59–60, http://dx.doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.1995.21

THE FUTURE OF OCEANOGRAPHY | Global Distribution of Coccolithophore Blooms

Author | First Paragraph | Full Article | Citation







Author

Cristopher W. Brown | Oceans and Ice Branch, NASA/GoddardSpace Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA

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First Paragraph

Blooms of the coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi regionally act as an important source of dimethyl sulfide (DMS) and calcium carbonate and alter the optical properties of the surface mixed layer (Balch et al., 1991; Holligan and Balch, 1991). These blooms, often covering vast areas, can be identified in visible satellite imagery because of the large amount of light backscattered from the water column. Their presence gives the ocean a milky white to turquoise appearance. The ability to detect E. huxleyi blooms in satellite imagery, in addition to furnishing biogeographical knowledge of the species at time and space scales unattainable with shipboard sampling, provides a method to assess their biogeochemical importance on basin to global scales.

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Full Article

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Citation

Brown, C.W. 1995. Global distribution of coccolithophore blooms. Oceanography 8(2):59–60, http://dx.doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.1995.21.

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