Scientists to scour African waters to gauge ocean pollution
Scientists on Saturday began a five-month mission to study how plastic pollution in Africa's main rivers and climate change stresses are impacting microorganisms in the Atlantic ocean, they announced.
The survey is being staged from the 33-year-old Tara research schooner which arrived in South Africa's Cape Town on Friday ahead of the expedition up the West African coast.
The researchers will analyze how nutrients and pollution in major African rivers—the Congo, Orange, Gambia and Senegal—are affecting the Atlantic.
They will trace the sources of plastic pollution at river mouths, to understand their distribution and the types of material involved.
The research station will also cast nets that can go up to 1,000 meters below the ocean's surface, to collect samples from ecosystems called "microbiomes", to be analyzed in labs on land. The data gathered will help answer key questions about the world's oceans.
The researchers will also study the Benguela Current, which moves up from South Africa to the Namibian and Angolan coasts.
It pulls up cold water from the ocean depths in a process known as upwelling, bringing nutrients to the surface.
"You get more nutrients here than anywhere else in the world," Emma Rocke, a 42-year-old research fellow at the University of Cape Town, who is working on the vessel, told AFP.
"Understanding that, and characterizing it at a microbiome level is something that hasn't been done really ever, and more importantly, it's not incorporated in climate change models".
She said the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports published so far don't consider the microbiome, "yet without it, ocean life would not exist".
Marine biologists will later study an upwelling current off the Senegalese coast, the world's third most powerful after Benguela and the Peru-Chile upwelling system.
The Tara vessel is on its 12th global mission and it involves 42 research institutions around the world.
Tara Ocean Foundation executive director Romain Trouble, 46, said that this is the first time the ship has traversed the West African coast.
"There's very little data on this kind of microbiome, microscopic species, in this ecosystem," he said.
University of Pretoria's microbial ecology and genome professor Thulani Makhalanyane, 37, will be focusing on the effect of agriculture and plastic pollution from African rivers.
"In coastal communities, we expect to see evidence of a high degree of pollution," said Makhalanyane. "We are also interested in other polluters that are perhaps not as well characterized, things like antibiotic resistance genes".
The vessel left its homeport of Lorient in France in December 2020 to embark on a 70,000-kilometer journey. Since then, it has traversed the coasts of Chile, Brazil and Argentina, as well as the Weddell Sea in Antarctica.
© 2022 AFP