A Dartmouth-led study proposes a new method for recruiting trillions of microscopic sea creatures called zooplankton in the ...
He and colleagues propose a novel approach that involves zooplankton poop in a Nature report. Many groups are proposing ...
The new technique begins with large blooms of microscopic plants called phytoplankton. These phytoplankton blooms remove ...
The technique harnesses the animals' daily habits to essentially accelerate the ocean’s natural cycle for removing carbon ...
The researchers aim to enhance the efficiency of the biological pump—a cycle that transfers carbon from the atmosphere to the ...
In a new study, scientists propose an unconventional solution to combating climate change: tiny poop from microscopic marine ...
Some of the world's smallest animals and their tiny poops could aid in the fight against climate change. A study reports that clay dust sprayed on the surface of seawater converts free-floating carbon ...
A study led by Dartmouth researchers shows that microscopic marine animals called zooplankton (pictured) can be enticed to ingest organic carbon particulates in seawater that are later confined to the ...