Whales both enable ocean plants to draw down CO2, and also help to store carbon in the ocean. Firstly, they provide essential nutrients that enable ocean plants to grow. Whale poop is a fertilizer, bringing nutrients from the depths, where whales feed, to the surface, where plants need these nutrients to photosynthesis. Migratory whales also bring nutrients with them from highly-productive feeding grounds, and release them in the nutrient-poor waters of whales’ breeding grounds, boosting the growth of ocean plants across the ocean.
Secondly, whales keep the carbon locked in the ocean, out of the atmosphere, where it could otherwise contribute to climate change. Tiny ocean plants produce carbon-based sugars, but have a very short lifespan, so they can’t store the carbon. When they die, a lot of this carbon is released in surface waters, and can be converted back to CO2. Whales, on the other hand, can live for over a century, feeding on food chains that begin with the sugars in these tiny plants, and accumulating the carbon in their huge bodies. When whales die, deep ocean life feeds on their remains, and the carbon formerly stored in whales’ bodies can enter sediments. When carbon reaches deep ocean sediment, it is effectively locked away, and therefore unable to drive climate change. This carbon is unlikely to return as CO2 in the atmosphere, potentially for millennia.
Since Pacific Islands contribute a tiny fraction to greenhouse gas emissions that drive climate change – less than half of 1%, for Pacific Island Governments, securing the well-being and contribution to the ecosystem that whales provide as a carbon sink is a practical action that can help to address the threat of climate change to Pacific island people, culture and land. Some now see an opportunity to include conservation of whales in their contributions to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), and support achievement of the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), both for ocean resources (SDG 14), and for action on climate change (SDG 13).