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Marine heatwaves have hidden impacts on ocean food webs and carbon cycling

Robotic floats can continuously collect data about ocean conditions. Analyzing these data alongside records from ship-based plankton surveys has revealed how marine heatwaves affect the ocean’s ability to store carbon. Image: © 2022 MBARI

Marine heatwaves have hidden impacts on ocean food webs and carbon cycling

New study analyzing data from robotic floats and plankton records reveals how marine heatwaves reshape ocean food webs and slow transport of carbon to the deep sea.

Why It Matters

The ocean and its inhabitants play an important role in cycling carbon and regulating Earth’s climate. Understanding how rising temperatures impact the ocean’s biological carbon pump is critical to modeling our changing climate.

Two researchers prepare a robotic float for deployment. The researcher on the left has a brown beard and is wearing a white hooded sweatshirt, an orange life vest, and black shorts. The researcher on the right has blonde hair and is wearing sunglasses, a black-and-white patterned shirt, an orange life vest, and black leggings. The cylindrical float has a gray plastic housing with a white sticker and black plastic instrumentation at the top. The researchers are standing on the deck of a research ship with a gray metal railing, blue ocean, blue sky, and white clouds in the background.
Robotic biogeochemical Argo (BGC-Argo) floats log a trove of data about oceanographic and biological conditions, taking the pulse of ocean health and helping researchers understand the impacts of climate change on the ocean. Image courtesy of Sudheesh Keloth

New research shows that marine heatwaves can reshape ocean food webs, which in turn can slow the transport of carbon to the deep sea and hamper the ocean’s ability to buffer against climate change. The study, published in the scientific journal Nature Communications today, was conducted by an interdisciplinary team of researchers from MBARI, the University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric, and Earth Science, the Hakai Institute, Xiamen University, the University of British Columbia, the University of Southern Denmark, and Fisheries and Oceans Canada.

To explore the impacts of marine heatwaves on ocean food webs and carbon flows, the research team combined multiple datasets that tracked biological conditions in the water column in the Gulf of Alaska for more than a decade. This region experienced two successive marine heatwaves during this time, one from 2013 to 2015 known as “The Blob,” and another from 2019 to 2020. 

“The ocean has a biological carbon pump, which normally acts like a conveyor belt carrying carbon from the surface to the deep ocean. This process is powered by the microscopic organisms that form the base of the ocean food web, including bacteria and plankton,” said the lead author, Mariana Bif, previously a research specialist at MBARI and now an assistant professor in the Department of Ocean Sciences at the Rosenstiel School. “For this study, we wanted to track how marine heatwaves affected those microscopic organisms to see if those impacts were connected to the amount of carbon being produced and exported to the deep ocean.”

The research team used information collected by the Global Ocean Biogeochemical (GO-BGC) Array, a collaborative initiative funded by the US National Science Foundation and led by MBARI that uses robotic floats to monitor ocean health.

An animated illustration shows the cycle of a robotic float profiling ocean conditions up and down the water column. The cylindrical float with a yellow plastic housing sinks down to a white line marked 1,000 meters, then moves to the right, then sinks down to a white line marked 2,000 meters before rising up to the surface of the ocean at the top of the frame. At the surface, four red waves transmit to a silver satellite moving across the top of the frame from left to right. In the top left corner is a colorful orange logo for the SOCCOM research project. The background of the animation is blue-gray ocean.
BGC-Argo floats collect detailed data about ocean conditions as they profile the water column every five to 10 days. Image: Kim Fulton-Bennett © 2020 MBARI

The GO-BGC project has deployed hundreds of autonomous biogeochemical Argo (BGC-Argo) floats, which measure ocean conditions such as temperature, salinity, nitrate, oxygen, chlorophyll, and particulate organic carbon (POC) up and down the water column every five to 10 days. The team also looked at seasonal data from ship-based surveys that tracked plankton community composition, including pigment chemistry and sequencing of the environmental DNA (eDNA) from seawater samples collected during the Line P program carried out by Fisheries and Oceans Canada.

The study found that marine heatwaves did impact the base of the ocean food web, and those impacts were connected to changes in the ways that carbon was cycled in the water column. However, the changes that occurred in the food web were not consistent across the two heatwaves. 

Under typical conditions, plant-like phytoplankton convert carbon dioxide to organic material. These microorganisms are the foundation of the ocean food web. When they are eaten by larger animals and excreted as waste, they transform into organic carbon particles that sink from the surface through the ocean’s mesopelagic, or twilight, zone (200 to 1,000 meters, approximately 660 to 3,300 feet) and down to the deep sea. This process locks atmospheric carbon away in the ocean for thousands of years.

During the 2013–2015 heatwave, surface carbon production by photosynthetic plankton was high in the second year, but rather than sinking rapidly to the deep sea, small carbon particles piled up approximately 200 meters (roughly 660 feet) underwater.

During the 2019–2020 heatwave, there was record-high accumulation of carbon particles at the surface in the first year that could not be attributed to carbon production by phytoplankton alone. Instead, this accumulation was likely due to the recycling of carbon by marine life and the buildup of detritus waste. This pulse of carbon then sank to the twilight zone, but lingered at depths of 200 to 400 meters (roughly 660 to 1,320 feet) instead of sinking to the deep sea. 

A data figure shows the buildup of organic carbon particles at different depths in 2014, 2015, 2019, and 2020. The figure has four rectangular plots with a light purple background and blobs of green. Each plot has a left axis with a text label that reads Depth (m, for meters) with notches for 0, 200, and 400, a right axis with a text label that reads POC (mg m^-3, or milligrams per cubic meter) with notches at increments of five for -15 to 15, and a bottom axis with notches labeled by month from January through December. At the top of the figure is a text label reading POC anomalies - 2014, and above each of the following plots is a year label for 2015, 2019, and 2020. The 2014 plot has a thin green blob at 0 meters for September and October. The 2015 plot has a large green blob at 0 to 300 meters from May through October. The 2019 plot has a large dark green blob from 0 to 300 meters from March through September. The 2020 plot has a light green blob at 0 meters for March through April, a dark green blob at 0 meters, and a light green blob at 200 meters for August through November.
Heatwaves in the Gulf of Alaska in 2015 and 2019 disrupted the export of carbon to the deep sea. Particulate organic carbon (POC, green) lingered in the midwater instead of being transported to the deep ocean. Image courtesy of Mariana Bif

The team attributed these differences in carbon transport between the two heatwaves to changes in phytoplankton populations. These changes cascaded through the food web, leading to a rise in small grazers who do not produce fast-sinking waste particles, so carbon was retained and recycled at the surface and in the upper twilight zone rather than sinking to deeper depths. 

“Our research found that these two major marine heatwaves altered plankton communities and disrupted the ocean’s biological carbon pump. The conveyor belt carrying carbon from the surface to the deep sea jammed, increasing the risk that carbon can return to the atmosphere instead of being locked away deep in the ocean,” said Bif.

This research demonstrated that not all marine heatwaves are the same. Different plankton lineages rise and fall during these warming events, underscoring the need for long-term, coordinated monitoring of the ocean’s biological and chemical conditions to accurately model the diverse, and expansive, ecological impacts of marine heatwaves.

“This research marks an exciting new chapter in ocean monitoring. To really understand how a heatwave impacts marine ecosystems and ocean processes, we need observation data from before, during, and after the event. This research included robotic floats, pigment chemistry, and genetic sequencing, all working together to tell the entire story. It’s a great example of how collaboration can help us answer key questions about the health of the ocean,” said MBARI Senior Scientist Ken Johnson, the lead principal investigator for the GO-BGC project and a coauthor of the study.

Two researchers prepare to deploy a robotic float over the side of a small boat. The researcher in the foreground is wearing a blue cap, gray sweatshirt, orange life vest, and gray pants, and is sitting on the railing of the boat. The researcher in the background is wearing an orange cap, a gray shirt, an orange life vest, yellow waders, and brown boots, and is standing near the stern of the boat. They are each holding one end of a cylindrical robotic float with a white plastic casing. The foreground is brown cardboard laid out on the deck of a boat. In the background are blue ocean, blue sky, and gray fog on the horizon.
The GO-BGC project has deployed hundreds of robotic floats to assess and track ocean health. Data from these floats help scientists understand how climate change affects marine life and ecosystems. Image: Jared Figurski © 2022 MBARI

Ocean observations and models suggest that marine heatwaves have been expanding in size and intensifying over the past few decades. The ocean absorbs a quarter of the carbon dioxide emitted each year, thanks to the steady stream of carbon particles sinking from the surface to the deep sea. A warmer ocean can mean less carbon locked away, which in turn can accelerate climate change. Beyond the changes to carbon transport, the shifts in plankton at the foundation of the ocean food web have cascading impacts on marine life and human industry too.

“Climate change is contributing to more frequent and intense marine heatwaves, which underscores the need for sustained, long-term ocean monitoring to understand and predict how future marine heatwaves will impact ecosystems, fisheries, and climate,” said Bif.

This work was funded by the US National Science Foundation’s GO-BGC project (NSF Award 1946578 with operational support from NSF Award 2110258), with additional support from the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, China National Science Foundation (grant number: 42406099), Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (grant number: 20720240105), Danish Center for Hadal Research (Grant No. DNRF145), and Fisheries and Oceans Line P program. 

Learn more about this work from Nature Research Communities


Research Publication:

Bif, M.B., C.T.E. Kellogg, Y. Huang, J. Anstett, S. Traving, M.A. Peña, S.J. Hallam, and K.S. Johnson. 2025. Marine heatwaves modulate food webs and carbon transport processes. Nature Communications. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-63605-w 


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