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7 responses to “How to clean up our rivers and lakes and save the world”

  1. patrickg

    Fascinating stuff. I am somewhat irrationally convinced that algae is still largely ignored as a potential problem solver in many different situations. Unfortunately when we think algae, we tend to think, blue-green, so I think it suffers from a bit of an image problem.

  2. Robert Merkel

    Hmmm. Speculating without all the facts of course, but the big concern with aqueous sequestration is how long the carbon dioxide stays there. That’s the big issue with the ocean seeding approaches.

  3. Brian

    patrickg, I’ve heard of it as a source of biofuel. But I suspect that you’d have to make lakes what he calls ‘obese” to make much difference, though, and that wouldn’t be good for biodiversity.

    Robert, yes, but worth keeping an eye on as more information comes to hand.

  4. Andrew Reynolds

    Robert,
    As you, speculating without all the facts, but I think that this is the process where all of that carbon got locked up in the first place. Algae (and other plant matter) ingesting the carbon, dying and dropping into sediment and then that sediment getting locked up in rocks.
    I don’t know if it would happen fast enough to reduce atmospheric carbon enough, but using the natural processes in this way at least makes some sense.

  5. Danny

    Don’t forget the salps, the fastest reproducing multi-celled animal on the planet , doubling their numbers several times a day, they turn the algae and bio-fixed carbon dioxide into faeces which drops to the ocean floor. They also take carbon to the floor with them when they die after a life cycle as short as only a couple of weeks.

    So we need to first maximise the carbon fixation of the algae, say by engineering their (micromonas/prochlorococcus) rubisco’s to more like those of hot sulfur springs red algae, (Galdieria spp.), a his/gln substitution, (“The mutant Rubiscos show.. 55% improvement in Km(CO2) compared to the (green algae) wild type.”), turbocharge the co2(atm)->o2(atm)+ c(bio-fixed) throughput further by tweaking the HLA3-mediated CO2 concentrating mechanism (ccm), and then just let the salps go about their shitty carbon biosequestration work.

  6. John D

    Fertilizer production is a significant source of emissions so any reduction is a plus. Carbon from dead organics can be sequestered for a long time if it is covered by sediment from growing deltas, infilling lakes etc. Not sure about how permeneant anything else would be.

  7. David Irving (no relation)

    Andrew, I think the last time a whole bunch of CO2 got locked up in algae, it created the stuff that our oil is made from and, incidentally, caused one of the great dyings. If it happened again, we’d probably be one of the species that died out.

    Anyone with greater knowledge in this area, feel free to contradict me.