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Where does all the carbon go?

Like car windows on a sunny day, carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases help trap the sun’s heat, keeping it close to Earth’s surface. To an extent, this is a good thing. Without that warming, Earth would be a ball of ice. But too much carbon dioxide in the atmosphere means too much warming. The key to preventing runaway climate change is to remove excess carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, but where can it go? 

Carbon isn’t just found in the air. It makes up every living organism on the planet, dissolves into water, and makes up some kinds of rocks. Carbon doesn’t stay in any one of those locations forever. It cycles through them. Sometimes movement from one location to another are fairly quick, like when plants take carbon dioxide from the air and use it to make food for themselves via photosynthesis. Other movements take hundreds of thousands of years, such as when rocks weather into soil, releasing small amounts of carbon as they do. 

Movement of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere is usually balanced by movement into other locations. But as people burn more fossil fuels, cut down forests, and drain coastal wetlands, they have released large amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. To prevent extreme warming, we need to switch the direction this excess carbon dioxide is traveling. Although planting trees can certainly help, the ocean plays a much bigger role. 

Some carbon dioxide dissolves into the ocean’s water. In fact, there’s far more carbon dioxide in the ocean than there is in the atmosphere. Phytoplankton and algae use some of that carbon dioxide in photosynthesis. Marine animals eat the plants—or each other—incorporating carbon into their bodies as it moves through the food chain. These animals produce fecal pellets and eventually die. Pellets and carcasses sink to the ocean floor, taking their carbon with them. 

The deep ocean is the largest reservoir of carbon on the planet, containing 37,100 gigatons—roughly 15-20 times more than that sequestered by land plants. (Illustration by WHOI Creative, © Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)
The deep ocean is the largest reservoir of carbon on the planet, containing 37,100 gigatons—roughly 15-20 times more than that sequestered by land plants. (Illustration by WHOI Creative, © Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)

Blue carbon refers to carbon taken up by coastal ecosystems, including seagrass meadows, mangroves, and salt marshes. These plants store some carbon in their roots. But these ecosystems are able to absorb much more carbon than a comparable amount of tropical rainforest. That’s because dead and dying leaves, branches, and other organisms settle into sediment that’s flooded with water, which deprives them of oxygen. Decomposers need oxygen to break down the dead material. Most of what settles in these areas doesn’t decay. Instead, it builds up as part of the sediment, trapping carbon and preventing it from re-entering the atmosphere. 

But it’s the deep ocean that plays the biggest role in trapping carbon. Some currents carry water from the surface down into the ocean’s depths. Carbon dioxide in that water mass winds up deep in the ocean—too deep to travel back to the surface. Marine animals that die and sink to the depths may be consumed as they fall or by bottom-dwellers once they land. Their carbon remains along the ocean floor or deep in the water column. These pathways can move carbon far from the atmosphere for hundreds or thousands of years.  

Some carbon gets buried in the bottom of the ocean. This happens most easily when deep layers of the ocean are low in oxygen. Bits of organic matter drift to the ocean floor and into the sediment. Over long periods of time, under high pressure, these layers become sedimentary rock, where carbon will remain for hundreds of thousands of years. 

LEARN MORE

Berkeley Understanding Global Change: Carbon Cycle. https://ugc.berkeley.edu/background-content/carbon-cycle/ 

NASA Earth Observatory. The carbon cycle. https://www.earthobservatory.nasa.gov/features/CarbonCycle 

NOAA Climate.gov. Understanding blue carbon. https://www.climate.gov/news-features/understanding-climate/understanding-blue-carbon 

Riedinger, N. et al. Persistent deep water anoxia in the eastern South Atlantic during the last ice age. PNAS. Vol. 118. 2021. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2107034118. 

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