Ocean Sustainability

Over 70% of the earth is covered in water, which serves as a vital resource human subsistence. Contamination and acidification pose major threats to aquatic health and biodiversity. Microbes offer a promising solution in their ability to breakdown contamination from oil spills and plastics. Applied microbiologists can play a significant part in understanding biodiversity, contributing to solutions, and encouraging stewardship.

Decline in plankton across North East Atlantic sends stark warning for ocean health

2026-06-29T15:55:00+01:00By

A new study has used more than six decades of data to show that plankton abundance is declining across vast swathes of the North East Atlantic – a region covering the Atlantic Ocean from Portugal to Norway, and the entirety of the North Sea.

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    Global assessment of ocean warming impacts on marine ecosystems

    New study reveals that year‑round ocean heating by 1.5°C drives over 200 documented marine ecosystem disruptions.

  • Port_of_Shanghai,_2004

    Global port microbiomes reveal hidden biosecurity signals

    By analyzing more than 16 million 16S rRNA gene sequences from 1,045 port water samples collected in 23 cities across five continents, a study has found clear biogeographic patterns, a core set of dominant bacterial genera, and widespread potential pathogens.

  • IceBridge_Arctic_2012_(7198504264)

    Fungi help lock carbon into Arctic fjord sediments

    A new study shows that fungi may play a surprisingly important role in keeping carbon locked into the seafloor. Researchers have found that marine fungi living in sediments efficiently assimilate dissolved organic matter and retain it as microbial biomass, rather than allowing it to be rapidly remineralised.

More Ocean Sustainability

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How sea-ice microbes survive the Southern Ocean’s harsh winter, and the implications for climate change

2026-06-18T13:25:00+01:00By

New study reinforces the importance of the Southern Ocean marginal ice zone as a critical hotspot for global sulfur cycling where biogeochemical processes for climate regulation are enhanced.