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Home - Biology - How Marine Algae Lock Away Carbon by Starving Bacteria

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How Marine Algae Lock Away Carbon by Starving Bacteria

Last updated: January 23, 2026 2:06 am
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The latest discoveries in Microbiology

A concise briefing on the most relevant research developments in your field, curated for clarity and impact.

How Marine Algae Lock Away Carbon by Starving Bacteria

Marine microalgae produce a complex sugar polymer called fucoidan, which bacteria in the ocean can break down to release carbon. New research reveals this bacterial degradation is surprisingly resource-intensive, requiring substantial phosphate. In low-phosphate ocean environments, this process is severely limited, allowing the fucoidan to persist. This mechanism stabilizes the carbon-rich compound in the water column, giving the algae a competitive edge and enhancing the ocean’s natural carbon sequestration capacity.

Why it might matter to you:
This work reveals a fundamental, nutrient-dependent constraint on microbial metabolism that governs the fate of carbon in marine systems. For a microbiologist, it underscores how environmental resource availability can dictate the outcome of host-microbe or producer-degrader interactions, a principle with parallels in other ecosystems, including the human gut. Understanding such bottom-up controls on bacterial activity is crucial for modeling biogeochemical cycles and predicting the stability of carbon sinks.

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