WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.060 --> 00:00:04.120 Phytoplankton…tiny, mostly single-celled organisms 2 00:00:04.120 --> 00:00:08.310 that live in the oceans, creating energy for our ocean’s ecosystems. 3 00:00:08.310 --> 00:00:12.530 They’re eaten by zooplankton, slightly larger organisms 4 00:00:12.530 --> 00:00:17.040 that make a daily trek from the ocean’s sunny upper layer to its pitch-black depths. 5 00:00:17.040 --> 00:00:21.130 In this cycle, they drift through an important region, 6 00:00:21.130 --> 00:00:25.340 a dimly lit middle ground between light and shadow…an area scientists call 7 00:00:25.340 --> 00:00:29.630 the twilight zone. 8 00:00:29.630 --> 00:00:33.850 Enter the Export Processes in the Ocean from RemoTe Sensing, or EXPORTS project 9 00:00:33.850 --> 00:00:38.050 – a team of more than 150 scientists…from 29 different institutions… 10 00:00:38.050 --> 00:00:42.230 onboard two research vessels with a fleet of autonomous vehicles… 11 00:00:42.230 --> 00:00:46.460 traveling west from Seattle to study these phytoplankton. 12 00:00:46.460 --> 00:00:51.180 The team, made up of researchers from NASA, the National Science Foundation, including 13 00:00:51.180 --> 00:00:55.400 the University of California- Santa Barbara, the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute 14 00:00:55.400 --> 00:00:59.650 and other university and agency partners, will deploy robotic explorers 15 00:00:59.650 --> 00:01:03.910 and instruments from the two ships to study the diversity of plankton in the ocean. 16 00:01:03.910 --> 00:01:08.030 The ocean absorbs approximately 1/2 of the carbon dioxide 17 00:01:08.030 --> 00:01:12.260 from Earth’s atmosphere. Like plants on land, phytoplankton take in this carbon 18 00:01:12.260 --> 00:01:16.570 and release oxygen. Their blooms can 19 00:01:16.570 --> 00:01:20.720 be seen in images taken from space. As the phytoplankton die or are eaten 20 00:01:20.720 --> 00:01:25.230 by zooplankton, that consumed carbon is exported into the twilight zone 21 00:01:25.230 --> 00:01:29.230 zone and stored there. Understanding the diversity and makeup of plankton 22 00:01:29.230 --> 00:01:33.450 in the ocean can help scientists understand the role the ocean plays in consuming, 23 00:01:33.450 --> 00:01:37.550 and sequestering, carbon from the atmosphere. 24 00:01:37.550 --> 00:01:41.700 In turn, understanding this can give insight into the ocean’s carbon cycle 25 00:01:41.700 --> 00:01:46.067 and how it helps regulate our home planet’s changing climate.