Research
Dr Frank Dehairs
Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Laboratorium voor Analytische Scheikunde (ANCH)
Pleinlaan, 2
B-1050 BRUSSELS
Phone: +32 (0)2 629 32 60
Fax: +32 (0)2 629 32 74
E-mail: fdehairs@vub.ac.be
www.vub.ac.be/infovoor/onderzoekers/research/
team.php?team_code=ANCH
Dr Christiane Lancelot
Université Libre de Bruxelles - C.P. 221
Microbiologie des Milieux Aquatiques
Campus de la Plaine
Bd. du Triomphe
B-1050 BRUSSELS
Phone:+32 (0)2 650 59 88
Fax: +32 (0)2 650 59 93
E-mail: lancelot@ulb.ac.be
www.ulb.ac.be/rech/inventaire/unites/ULB115.html
Prof.
Luc André
Royal Museum for Central Africa
Dept of Geology and Mineralogy
Steenweg op Leuven, 13
B-3080 TERVUREN
Phone: +32 (0)2 769 54 59
Fax: +32 (0)2 769 54 32
E-mail: landre@africamuseum.be
www.africamuseum.be/research/projects/prj_detail?prjid=395
Dr Michel Frankignoulle (Université de
Liège)
Université de Liège
Unité d'Océanographie chimique
Sart Tilman - Physique B5
B-4000 LIEGE
Phone: +32 (0)4 366 33 26
Fax: +32 (0)4 366 23 55
E-mail: michel.frankignoulle@ulg.ac.be
www.ulg.ac.be/cms/c_566135/en/godavari-a-long-gentle-river
Dr Eric Deleersnijder
Université Catholique de Louvain
Institut d'Astronomie et de Géophysique G. Lemaître
Chemin du Cyclotron, 2
B-1348 LOUVAIN-LA-NEUVE
Phone: +32 (0)10 47 26 76
Fax: +32 (0)10 47 47 22
E-mail: ericd@astr.ucl.ac.be
www.astr.ucl.ac.be/index.php?page=ResearchModels
This research attempts to determine the role - CO2 source or sink - of the Southern Ocean on a regional and seasonal scale by implementing an integrated multidisciplinary approach which combines in situ measurements, studies of process in laboratory controlled conditions and numerical computation. It approaches the whole of the processes which govern the cycle of carbon in the Southern Ocean, from exchanges of CO2 at the air/sea interface until to accumulation of carbon in the sediments. It is based on a mechanistic scientific approach which aims at improving comprehension of the production process and of mineralisation of carbonated biomass in surface water as well as export towards the deep ocean. In particular, the roles of light and the availability in nutrients (major and minor) in the determination of the dominant phytoplanktonic community, and thus of the dynamics of the associated food chain and the carbon exportation, will be studied in areas dominated by various phytoplanktonic communities, namely the diatoms, the colonies of Phaeocystis and the nanophytoplankton. The role of aggregates as carbon conveyors, from surface to the deep water and the sediments, will be investigated with special attention to the following processes : the bacterial mineralisation of aggregates and the production and fate of the barite proxy.
The use of the barite as tracer of the exported carbon flux will be evaluated in order to improve the existing transfer functions. Acquired knowledge will then be integrated in a 1D physical and biogeochemical model able to simulate the cycle of carbon as well associated biogenic elements (N, Si, Fe, Mn, Ba) in the whole water column of the Southern Ocean over a seasonal cycle. All together, this study will contribute to establish a diagnostic and predictive model which will be used to evaluate the role of the Southern Ocean in a global perspective.
This integrated study has as overall objective to determine the role of the Southern Ocean - CO2 source or sink - on a seasonal and regional scale. It more specifically aims at bringing an answer to the following questions :
The project combines the specific expertise of different research groups in Belgium. The expertise of the Royal Museum for Central Africa-Section of Mineralogy and Petrography (Luc André) is situated within the research of Barite geochemistry. Specific research items include:
Dr F. DEHAIRS: New and export production
Dr Ch. LANCELOT: Study and modellisation of the planktonic system
Prof. L. ANDRÉ: Barite geochemistry
Dr M. FRANKIGNOULLE: Air/sea exchanges
Dr E. DELEERSNIJDER: 1-D modelling of the sea-ice and water column