Greetings! [ Log in ] [ Register ] [ Intranet ] [ Manage Mailing Lists Subscriptions ]
  • Home
  • About Ocean Leadership
    • From the President's Office
    • Staff Directory
    • Mission
    • Board of Trustees
    • Membership
    • Employment, Internships and Opportunities
    • Visiting
    • History
  • News & Resources
    • Events Calendar
    • Press Releases
    • News Archive
    • Newsletters & Program Updates
    • Publications
    • Resources for Scientists
    • Requests for Proposals
    • SCAMPI
    • Glossary of Acronyms
    • Ocean Leadership Logos and Style Guide
  • Multimedia
    • Videos
    • YouTube
    • Photos
    • Podcasts
    • Podcasts on iTunes
  • Programs & Partnerships
    • Scientific Ocean Drilling
    • Ship Conversion
    • Ocean Observing
    • Census of Marine Life
    • National Oceanographic Partnership Program
    • U.S. Science Support Program
    • Friends of NOAA
  • Education
    • Marine Geoscience Leadership Symposium
    • Deep Earth Academy
    • Diversity
    • National Ocean Sciences Bowl
    • Ocean Sciences Educators Retreat
  • Ocean Policy & Legislation
    • Science Funding
    • Ocean Governance
    • Ocean Education
    • Climate Change
    • Ocean Leadership Priorities
    • Energy & Mineral Resources
    • Ocean & Coastal Management
    • Ocean Exploration & Observation
    • Marine Conservation
    • Public Policy Forum
    • Legislative Tracker
    • Policy 101
  • Meetings & Workshops
    • Travel Support

Home » Discovery » New Climate Change Signal: Oceans Turning Acidic

New Climate Change Signal: Oceans Turning Acidic

Posted by Will Ramos on Wednesday, December 9th, 2009 at 1:33 pm
Filed under: Discovery, News & Resources
(Click to enlarge image) Ocean acidification (Credit: MCT)

(Click to enlarge image) Ocean acidification (Credit: MCT)

Climate change is driving talks to curb greenhouse gas emissions in Copenhagen, but scientists warn that rising CO2 is turning oceans more acidic.

(From The Christian Science Monitor / by Peter N. Spotts) -- Forget “climategate” and arguments over whether the Earth is really warming. If you need a simple, non-controversial scientific reason to support curtailing greenhouse gas emissions, stop looking skyward and look at the pH of the oceans.

At least that’s the argument Jeffrey Short made Tuesday at the global climate change summit in Copenhagen. Dr. Short, the Pacific science director for Oceana, an environmental group working to protect the world’s oceans, says that regardless of the impact on climate, the billions of tons of carbon-dioxide (CO2) that human activity pumps out every year is making oceans more acidic.

That’s threatening fisheries that millions rely on for food and livelihoods. Already some shellfish, from commercially important crabs, clams, and mussels to tiny creatures called pteropods (dubbed the “potato chips of the ocean” for the important rung they occupy near the bottom of the marine food chain), are showing the effects of ocean acidification. Coral reefs, important nurseries for commercial fish species, are also being threatened.

The damage to the oceans should be enough on its own to push policy makers to sign a global agreement to reduce CO2 emissions, “even if carbon dioxide didn’t do anything to warm the atmosphere,” says Short, who spent more than 30 years as a marine scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) before entering the policy arena.

Ocean acidification refers to the effect CO2 has on seawater as the oceans take up the gas. The world’s oceans absorb roughly 25 percent of the CO2 humans release into the atmosphere each year. That CO2 reacts with seawater to form small but increasing amounts of carbonic acid.

Shellfish as canaries in the coal mine

The change is virtually imperceptible to humans, but it’s a different story for some marine animals that build shells. Shell building creatures rely on an excess of dissolved calcium carbonate in the oceans, built up from millenniums of rock erosion on land. More and more of this raw material for shells is being diverted to, in effect, neutralize the acid, leaving less dissolved carbonates for shell-builders to use.

Ocean acidification could harm coral reefs by taking up mineral aragonite in seawater that the small animals use to build the elaborate structures that are home to fish and protect coasts from storm surges.

To be sure, the reaction to rising acidity isn’t the same with all species. Researchers at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) subjected 18 species of shellfish to varying degrees of CO2-induced acidity in seawater in special tanks. They exposed the water to varying levels of CO2, selected from among the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s emissions scenarios. Unexpectedly seven species, including lobsters, shrimp, and clams, actually built thicker shells.

“Some organisms were very sensitive,” Anne Cohen, a researcher at WHOI who took part in the study, said. “But there were a couple that didn’t respond to CO2 or didn’t respond till it was sky-high – about 2,800 parts per million. We’re not expecting to see that anytime soon.” One of the seven stoics was coral.

The team cautions that the animals were well fed and were not subject to any other environmental stresses. So the results don’t shed much light on the synergystic effects acidification might have on the seven survivors. That’s for another round of experiments. Still, “we can’t assume that elevated CO2 causes a proportionate decline in calcification of all calcifying organisms,” says Cohen.

No complex computer models here

The science behind the ocean acidification process is far more straightforward than climate science – needing little more than a high-school grasp of chemistry to understand, says Richard Feeley, a researchers at NOAA’s Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory in Seattle, Wash.

He says that the oceans are soaking up CO2 at a rate that matches the rate at which atmospheric CO2 concentrations are rising. The link between rising human emissions and rising uptake is unequivocal, he says, adding that the ocean is growing acidic at a pace 100 times faster than at any time in at least 20 million years. And no matter which ocean researchers examine, “we get the same changes everywhere we look,” he says.

While the basic mechanism is easy to grasp, scientists are finding it more difficult to determine the long-term biological effects. Much depends on the animals involved, as well as natural cycles of ocean circulation that bring carbonate-poor waters to the surface.

Scientists in Australia, for instance, have projected that rising acidity may start eating into populations of tiny plankton in the Southern Ocean far sooner than previously believed. The reason: natural upwellings of carbonate-poor water combines with acidification to deprive the creatures of carbonates at a critical time in their development. They had adapted to deal with upwelling part of the equation. But they are unprepared to handle the additional reduction in carbonate caused by the industrial CO2 being added to the oceans.

Others have found evidence of shellfish losing their ability to grip rocks in increasingly acidic waters, as well as signs of shell erosion.

Filmmaker Sven Husbey, who along with his wife produced a documentary on the subject, says that as they’ve toured the world showing the film they have won converts. Many of the viewers are self-described skeptics about global warming. Yet “again and again and again, they get ocean acidification,” he says. “Even if we could cope with global warming without reducing emissions, we would still lose the oceans.”


Related Posts:

  • The Life Acidic
  • Taking the Pulse of the North Atlantic
  • ONW: Week of November 9, 2009 – Number 74
  • Deep Sea Science: Focus on South Texas Snapper Banks
  • MMS Funding Expedition to Study Deepwater Coral Habitats
Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • del.icio.us
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • RSS
  • PDF

Comments are closed.

« Home | « Previous Page

Discovery »

The Census of Marine Life: Photo of the Week - Tagged Green Sturgeon

The Census of Marine Life: Photo of the Week - Tagged Green Sturgeon Yurok Tribal Biologists with tagged green sturgeon in the lower Klamath River.
More articles »

Understanding »

Mission San Jose Takes First at Sea Lion Bowl

Mission San Jose Takes First at Sea Lion Bowl Mission San Jose High school took home first place honors again at the Sea Lion Bowl, a regional Ocean Sciences competition held at San Francisco State University on March 6.
More articles »

Action »

The Role of Science in a National Ocean Policy

The Role of Science in a National Ocean Policy On February 23, 2010, Bob Gagosian, President and CEO of Consortium for Ocean Leadership, delivered the keynote address during an event sponsored by The Oceanographic Society at the Ocean Sciences meeting in Portland Oregon.
More articles »

Be an Ocean Leader

Subscribe via Twitter
795 Followers
Subscribe via Facebook
217 Fans
Subscribe via RSS
180 Readers
Subscribe via Email
Subscribe

Upcoming Events

  • March 22, 2010:
    • Challenges and Opportunities in Academic Marine Seismology (all day)
  • April 29, 2010:
    • OOI Science Community Workshop: April 29-30, 2010 (all day)
  • May 3, 2010:
    • Offshore Technology Conference (all day)
  • May 8, 2010:
    • AGU Chapman Conference on Detachments in Oceanic Lithosphere: Deformation, Magmatism, Fluid Flow, and Ecosystems (all day)
  • May 24, 2010:
    • Oceans 2010 IEEE (all day)
  • June 1, 2010:
    • PACON 2010: International Marine Science and Technology Conference – Registration is Now Open! (all day)
  • June 3, 2010:
    • The MoHole: A Crustal Journey and Mantle Quest (all day)
  • June 8, 2010:
    • MTS TechSurge Workshop - Ocean Observing: Thinking Outside the Basin (all day)
  • June 12, 2010:
    • Gordon Research Seminar (GRS) on OHH (all day)
  • June 13, 2010:
    • The 2010 Gordon Research Conference (GRC) on Oceans and Human Health (OHH) (all day)

RSS JOIDES Resolution Blog

  • 03 11 10: EPILOGUE
  • 03 07 10: "The Big Goodbye"
  • Heading Home
  • Live to the Exploratorium in San Francisco!
  • A.V.C - After the video conference
  • As the sun sets on the last part of this Expedition yet another magical sunrise
  • You think we have lots of blogs here?
  • Just look outside!
  • Blog Entry 02 18 10 No one can say that we didn’t try
  • Blog Entry 02 16 10: The Two Sides of Antarctica

Archives

UserOnline

  • 18 Users Online
  • Users: 11 Guests, 8 Bots

Recent Comments

  • Chilean marine science devastated by earthquake | Deep Sea News on University of Concepcion Oceanographic Relief Fund
  • US-Canada partnership expands innovative ocean cesearch « VENUS on US-Canada Partnership Expands Innovative Ocean Research
  • Tweets that mention Ice Is 'Rotten' in the Beaufort Sea -- Topsy.com on Ice Is 'Rotten' in the Beaufort Sea
  • Tweets that mention Discovery of Algae's Toxic Hunting Habits Could Help Curb Fish Kills -- Topsy.com on Discovery of Algae's Toxic Hunting Habits Could Help Curb Fish Kills
  • Tweets that mention NOAA Gives Navy Marine Mammal Protection Measures for Exercises off the Gulf Coast -- Topsy.com on NOAA Gives Navy Marine Mammal Protection Measures for Exercises off the Gulf Coast
  • Tweets that mention NOAA: December Global Ocean Temperature Second Warmest on Record -- Topsy.com on NOAA: December Global Ocean Temperature Second Warmest on Record
  • uberVU - social comments on NOAA Gives Navy Marine Mammal Protection Measures for Exercises off the Gulf Coast
  • Tweets that mention Make the Southern Ocean the Soundtrack to Your Work Day -- Topsy.com on Make the Southern Ocean the Soundtrack to Your Work Day
  • uberVU - social comments on Discovery of Algae's Toxic Hunting Habits Could Help Curb Fish Kills
  • Tweets that mention Make the Southern Ocean the Soundtrack to Your Work Day -- Topsy.com on Make the Southern Ocean the Soundtrack to Your Work Day

All-Time Top 10 Posts

  • More IODP Expedition 320 Whale Shark
  • New Polar Bear Rule Sent to White House
  • Tagging the Great White Shark...and a Few of His Friends
  • 13 Days of Halloween: The Flying Dutchman
  • Barcoding Endangered Sea Turtles
  • Ocean Observatories Initiative Receives Award
  • 13 Days of Halloween: Top 10 Weirdest Sea Creatures
  • Overfishing Dangerously Depleting Ocean Life
  • Could Human CO2 Emissions Cause Another PETM?
  • Marine Mammal Research Program Act Introduced in the House of Representatives

Latest Photos

photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo

Latest Video Post

IODP Expedition 318: Wilkes Land Week Report SIX

Recent Posts

  • The Census of Marine Life: Photo of the Week - Tagged Green Sturgeon
  • ONW: Week of March 15, 2010 - Number 84
  • The Role of Science in a National Ocean Policy
  • Climate 'Fix' Could Poison Sea Life
  • EPA to Allow States Address Rising Ocean Acidity
  • Jaws - 4 Million BC: How an Extinct Shark Attacked Its Prey
  • Southern Ocean Winds Open Window to the Deep Sea
  • New NOAA Web Site Emphasizes Broader Impacts of Sea Ice Loss
  • UN Rejects Export Ban on Atlantic Bluefin Tuna
  • Sturgeon More Critically Endangered Than Any Other Group of Species

Popular This Month

  • More IODP Expedition 320 Whale Shark
  • Plastic Rubbish Blights Atlantic Ocean
  • New Polar Bear Rule Sent to White House
  • 13 Days of Halloween: The Flying Dutchman
  • Tagging the Great White Shark...and a Few of His Friends
  • Ocean Leadership 2010 Public Policy Forum
  • Barcoding Endangered Sea Turtles
  • ONW: Week of March 1, 2010 - Number 82
  • University of Concepcion Oceanographic Relief Fund
  • Overfishing Dangerously Depleting Ocean Life

RSS Latest from ScienceDaily

  • Children with insomnia may have impaired heart rate variability
  • Omega 3 curbs precancerous growths in those prone to bowel cancer, study suggests
  • Bully galaxy rules the neighborhood
  • Tryptophan-enriched diet reduces pig aggression
  • Plant's ability to identify, block invading bacteria examined
  • Frequency and cost of copying college homework revealed
  • Children and teens less likely than young adults to die of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
  • Variability as well as high blood pressure holds high risk of stroke
  • Evolution of fairness and punishment
  • Barnacles prefer upwelling currents, enriching food chains in the Galapagos
Web design by Will Ramos | © Copyright Consortium for Ocean Leadership 2007-2009. All Rights Reserved. | 41 queries in 1.276 seconds.