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Data Types

From OceanWiki
Revision as of 11:50, 5 December 2025 by Hagi BucknWise (talk | contribs)

Oceanographers measuring bulk rates of carbon fixation and respiration as well as elemental composition, i.e. how much particulate carbon, nitrogen, or phosphorus is present in a given volume of water, provide foundational information about ocean biogeochemical cycles. These bulk measurements can be coupled with targeted methods to further assess rates of transformation (Levine et al. 2025). More recently, new tools in analytical chemistry, molecular microbiology, and bioinformatics are enhancing our ability to integrate process-based mechanisms and biomass estimates of functional groups of interest into the study of ocean biogeochemistry (Moran et al. 2016).
In addition, advances in sequencing and mass spectrometry technologies over the last decades have accelerated the study of microbial communities. These high-throughput, data-rich approaches enable assessment of community taxonomic and functional composition, metabolic potential and diversity, and phylogeny and evolutionary history across the global oceans.

Laboratory-based

In situ measurements

Global optics-based

Omics-based