@ARTICLE{10.21494/ISTE.OP.2022.0776, TITLE={Planktonium : Courts métrages et séries de photos sur le monde caché du plancton microscopique vivant}, AUTHOR={Jan van IJken, }, JOURNAL={Arts et sciences}, VOLUME={6}, NUMBER={Numéro 1
}, YEAR={2022}, URL={http://openscience.fr/Planktonium-Courts-metrages-et-series-de-photos-sur-le-monde-cache-du-plancton-microscopique-vivant}, DOI={10.21494/ISTE.OP.2022.0776}, ISSN={2515-8767}, ABSTRACT={Planktonium is a short film about the unseen world of living microscopic plankton. It is a voyage into a secret universe, inhabited by alien-like creatures. These stunningly beautiful, very diverse and numerous organisms are unknown to most of us because they are invisible to the naked eye. However, they are wandering beneath the surface of all waters around us and they are of vital importance for all life on earth. Jan van IJken filmed the plankton through his microscopes, revealing the beauty and delicate structures of the minute organisms in the finest detail. The film is without any voice-over or explanation. Renowned Norwegian artist Jana Winderen made a sound composition for the film. She is recording audio environments and creatures which are hard for humans to access, both physically and aurally – deep under water, inside ice or in frequency ranges inaudible to the human ear. Phytoplankton (small plant-like cells) are producing half of all oxygen on earth by photosynthesis, like plants and trees do on land. Zooplankton are forming the base of the food chain of aquatic life. Plankton are also playing an important part in the global carbon cycle. The plankton are threatened by climate change, global warming and acidification of the oceans.}}