> Um...no, as I read this it is basically talking about soil erosion
> carrying down the soil carbon content to the ocean where a lot of it may
> be expected to sink. But even with my relatively sanguine attitude (at
> least compared to some) I find it hard to see increased soil erosion
> from storms as a good thing. This seems a very weak silver lining to
> that particular cloud!

*I just stumbled onto this, take a look at these NASA animations and
Quicktime movies on exactly what we are talking about. The animations
show a blue shading trailing the hurricanes which they say is cooler
water which brings on the phytoplankton blooms and makes the ocean
healthier.*
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
June 17, 2004 - (date of web publication)
NASA DATA SHOWS HURRICANES HELP PLANTS BLOOM IN "OCEAN DESERTS"

Whenever a hurricane races across the Atlantic Ocean, chances are
phytoplankton will bloom behind it. According to a new study using
NASA satellite data, these phytoplankton blooms may also affect the
Earth's climate and carbon cycle.

Dr. Steven Babin, a researcher at the Johns Hopkins University Applied
Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Md., studied 13 North Atlantic
hurricanes between 1998 and 2001. Ocean color data from the SeaWiFS
instrument on the SeaStar satellite were used to analyze levels of
chlorophyll, the green pigment in plants. The satellite images showed
tiny microscopic ocean plants, called phytoplankton, bloomed following
the storms.

"Some parts of the ocean are like deserts, because there isn't enough
food for many plants to grow. A hurricane's high winds stir up the
ocean waters and help bring nutrients and phytoplankton to the
surface, where they get more sunlight, allowing the plants to bloom,"
Babin said.

The study found the physical make-up of a storm, including its size,
strength and forward speed, is directly related to the amount of
phytoplankton that blooms. Bigger storms appear to cause larger
phytoplankton blooms. An increased amount of phytoplankton should have
more chlorophyll, which satellite sensors can see.

Hurricane-induced upwelling, the rising of cooler nutrient-rich water
to the ocean surface, is also critical in phytoplankton growth. For
two to three weeks following almost every storm, the satellite data
showed phytoplankton growth. Babin and his colleagues believe it was
stimulated by the addition of nutrients brought up to the surface.

Whenever the quantity of plants increases or decreases, it affects the
amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. As phytoplankton grow,
they absorb carbon dioxide, a heat-trapping greenhouse gas. The gas is
carried to the ocean floor as a carbon form when the tiny plants die.
This enables atmospheric carbon to get into the deep ocean. It is one
of several natural processes that contribute to Earth's carbon cycle.

By stimulating these phytoplankton blooms, hurricanes can affect the
ecology of the upper ocean. Phytoplankton is at the bottom of the food
chain. The factors that influence their growth also directly affect
the animals and organisms that feed on them. In addition, since
climate-related phenomena like El NiƱo may change the frequency and
intensity of hurricanes, storm-induced biological activity may have
even greater contributions to future climate change.

http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2004/0602hurricanebloom.html






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