| Contributors | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Braakman, Rogier | Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT-EAPS) | Principal Investigator |
| Dyhrman, Sonya T. | Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO) | Principal Investigator |
| Kujawinski, Elizabeth | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) | Principal Investigator |
| Longnecker, Krista | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) | Scientist |
| Zhu, Yuting | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) | Scientist |
| Anderson, Hanna | Columbia University | Student |
| Gray, Laura | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) | Data Manager |
| Rauch, Shannon | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO) | BCO-DMO Data Manager |
See related datasets for a description of the culture methods.
5 milliliters (mL) of filtrate samples and media blanks were diluted with 25 mL of Milli-Q water, acidified to pH~3 with concentrated hydrochloric acid, and stored at 4 degrees Celsius (°C) until processed on a Shimadzu TOC-L total organic carbon analyzer. Measurements were made using potassium hydrogen phthalate as a standard solution.
DOC concentration was determined by subtracting the instrument blank area from the average peak area and dividing by the slope of the standard curve. Comparison with consensus reference material purchased from the Hansell lab at the University of Miami was conducted regularly to ensure the accuracy of these measurements.
- Imported original file "DOC in culture filtrate and media blank.xlsx" into the BCO-DMO system.
- Saved the final file as "991509_v1_pxm1_doc.csv"
| Parameter | Description | Units |
| Sample | species name and the type of sample (filtrate or media) | unitless |
| strain | strain identifier of the phytoplankton species | unitless |
| NPOC | non-purgeable organic carbon, a measurement of dissolved organic carbon | micromoles per liter (µmol/L) |
| Dataset-specific Instrument Name | Shimadzu TOC-L total organic carbon analyzer |
| Generic Instrument Name | Shimadzu TOC-L Analyzer |
| Dataset-specific Description | Samples were processed on a Shimadzu TOC-L total organic carbon analyzer. |
| Generic Instrument Description | A Shimadzu TOC-L Analyzer measures DOC by high temperature combustion method.
Developed by Shimadzu, the 680 degree C combustion catalytic oxidation method is now used worldwide. One of its most important features is the capacity to efficiently oxidize hard-to-decompose organic compounds, including insoluble and macromolecular organic compounds. The 680 degree C combustion catalytic oxidation method has been adopted for the TOC-L series.
http://www.shimadzu.com/an/toc/lab/toc-l2.html |
The Center for Chemical Currencies of a Microbial Planet (C-CoMP) is focused on understanding marine chemical currencies. This project examines exometabolites released from representative taxa of marine phytoplankton to better characterize the composition of labile marine dissolved organic matter and understand the biological sources of these metabolites to the marine environment. Specifically, this project integrates novel metabolomics, genomics, transcriptomics, and proteomics methods to identify extracellular metabolites and link them with their production pathways under environmentally relevant conditions.
Functions carried out by microscopic inhabitants of the surface ocean affect every aspect of life on our planet, regardless of distance from the coast. Ocean phytoplankton are responsible for half of the photosynthesis on Earth, the first step in a complex system that annually withdraws 50 billion metric tons of carbon from the atmosphere to sustain their growth. Of this, 25 billion metric tons participate in a rapid cycle in which biologically reactive material is released into seawater and converted back into carbon dioxide by marine bacteria within hours to days. The chemical-microbe network at the heart of this fast cycle remains poorly constrained; consequently, its primary currencies and controls remain elusive; its sensitivities to changing ocean conditions are unknown; and its responses to future climate scenarios are not predictable. The Center for Chemical Currencies of a Microbial Planet (C-CoMP) integrates research, education and knowledge transfer activities to develop a mechanistic understanding of surface ocean carbon flux within the context of a changing ocean and through increased participation in ocean sciences. C-CoMP supports science teams that merge biology, chemistry, modeling, and informatics to close long-standing knowledge gaps in the identities and dynamics of organic molecules that serve as the currencies of elemental transfer between the ocean and atmosphere. C-CoMP fosters education, outreach, and knowledge transfer activities that engage students of all ages, broaden participation in the next generation of ocean scientists, and extend novel open-science approaches into complementary academic and industrial communities. The Center framework is critical to this mission, uniquely facilitating an open exchange of experimental and computational science, methodological and conceptual challenges, and collaborations that establish integrated science and education partnerships. With expanded participation in ocean science research and ocean literacy across the US society, the next generation of ocean scientists will better reflect the diverse US population.
Climate-carbon feedbacks on the marine carbon reservoir are major uncertainties for future climate projections, and the trajectory and rate of ocean changes depend directly on microbial responses to temperature increases, ocean acidification, and other perturbations driven by climate change. C-CoMP research closes an urgent knowledge gap in the mechanisms driving carbon flow between ocean and atmosphere, with global implications for predictive climate models. The Center supports interdisciplinary science teams following open and reproducible science practices to address: (1) the chemical currencies of surface ocean carbon flux; (2) the structure and regulation of the chemical-microbe network that mediates this flux; and (3) sensitivity of the network and its feedbacks on climate. C-CoMP leverages emerging tools and technologies to tackle critical challenges in these themes, in synergy with existing ocean programs and consistent with NSF’s Big Ideas. C-CoMP education and outreach activities seek to overcome barriers to ocean literacy and diversify participation in ocean research. The Center is developing (1) initiatives to expand ocean literacy in K-12 and the broader public, (2) ocean sciences undergraduate curricula and research opportunities that provide multiple entry points into research experiences, (3) post-baccalaureate programs to transition undergraduates into graduate education and careers in ocean science, and (4) interdisciplinary graduate student and postdoctoral programs that prepare the next generation of ocean scientists. The C-CoMP team includes education faculty who evaluate the impacts of education and outreach activities and export successful STEM initiatives to the education community. C-CoMP is revolutionizing the technologies for studying chemical transformations in microbial systems to build understanding of the outsized impact of microbes on elemental cycles. Open science, cross-disciplinary collaborations, community engagement, and inclusive practices foster strategic advances in critical science problems and STEM initiatives. C-CoMP science, education, and knowledge-transfer themes are efficiently addressed through a sustained network of scientists addressing critical research challenges while broadening the workforce that will tackle multi-disciplinary problems with academic, industrial and policy partners.
This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.
The Program's Data Management Plan (DMP) is available as a PDF document.
| Funding Source | Award |
|---|---|
| NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) |