DSSS - Exploring the ocean multiverse with Tara Oceans
- Datum: 20.10.2023
- Uhrzeit: 15:00 - 16:00
- Vortragender: Prof. Chris Bowler
- Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Section Institut de Biologie de l'Ecole Normale Supérieure (IBENS) Paris
- Ort: NO.002, MPI für Intelligente Systeme
The
ocean is the largest ecosystem on Earth and yet we know very little about it.
This is particularly true for the plankton that drift within, even though they
form the base of marine food webs and are key players in Earth’s biogeochemical
cycles (Bowler et al. Nature Microbiol., 2022). Ocean plankton are at least as
important for the Earth system as the forests on land, but most of them are
invisible to the naked eye and thus are largely uncharacterized. To increase
our understanding of this underexplored world, a multidisciplinary consortium, Tara Oceans, was formed around the 36m
research schooner Tara, which sampled
plankton at more than 210 sites and multiple depth layers in all the major
oceanic regions during expeditions from 2009-2013 (Karsenti et al. Plos Biol.,
2011). This talk will summarize the foundational resources from the project,
which collectively represent the largest DNA sequencing effort for the oceans
(see Science special issue May 22, 2015 and Cell, Nov 14, 2019), and analyses
that illustrate several aspects of the Tara
Oceans’ eco-systems biology approach to address microbial contributions to ecological
and evolutionary processes. The project provides unique resources for several
scientific disciplines that are foundational for mapping ocean biodiversity of
a wide range of organisms that are rarely studied together, exploring their
interactions, and integrating biology into our physico-chemical understanding
of the ocean, as well as for identifying new organisms and genes of biotechnological
interest. These resources, and the scientific innovations emerging to
understand them, are furthermore critical towards developing baseline
ecological context and predictive power needed to track the impact of climate
change on the ocean.