The gelatinous creature sucks up organisms that absorb CO2 and leaves droppings rich in carbon at the bottom of the sea

Salps are jelly-like sea creatures, so humble that few people even know they exist. But there are countless numbers of them swimming in the world’s oceans and they help fight climate change.

Salps cruise around the sea surface at night, sucking up and digesting phytoplankton, microscopic plant-like organisms that absorb CO2 for their photosynthesis. During the day, the salps sink deeper in the sea, possibly to avoid predators, and squirt out unusually heavy droppings rich in carbon left over from their phytoplankton meals. The pellets sink rapidly, up to 1,000 metres deep in a day, and faster than the pellets of most other sea creatures. And when the salp dies, its body also sinks rapidly, sending even more carbon to the ocean depths.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Manchester City beat snow and West Ham with Fernandinho goal

This was a muted affair in which Manchester City kept West Ham…

Almost 300 asylum seekers have died trying to cross the Channel since 1999

First research to collate figures documents the people who have lost their…

Stop-and-search plans risk ‘perpetually criminalising’ people, say UK rights groups

Research shows that widening police powers increases further racial disparities, say groups…

‘We still haven’t cracked it!’ How much does a play change during previews?

It is a fraught time of cuts, rewrites – and alcohol. Our…