SuperUser Account Tuesday, October 13, 2015 / Categories: Press Release, Climate, Ecosystems, Fisheries & Seafood, Marine Science, 2015 NOAA-led research identifies areas of global ocean most vulnerable to ocean acidification New NOAA-led research maps the distribution of aragonite saturation state in both surface and subsurface waters of the global ocean and provides further evidence that ocean acidification is happening on a global scale. The study identifies the Arctic and Antarctic oceans, and the upwelling ocean waters off the west coasts of North America, South America and Africa as regions that are especially vulnerable to ocean acidification. “These findings will help us better understand and develop strategies to adapt to the severity of ocean acidification in different marine ecosystems around the world,” said Richard A. Feely, a NOAA oceanographer and co-author of the study, which has been accepted for publication and can be read online in the American Geophysical Union journal Global Biogeochemical Cycles. Ocean acidification is caused by humankind's release of carbon dioxide emissions to the atmosphere. Excess carbon dioxide enters the ocean, reacts with water, decreases ocean pH and lowers carbonate ion concentrations, making waters more corrosive to marine species that need carbonate ions and dissolved calcium to build and maintain healthy shells and skeletons. The saturation state of seawater for a mineral such as aragonite is a measure of the potential for the mineral to form or to dissolve. In the new study, scientists determined the saturation state of aragonite in order to map regions that are vulnerable to ocean acidification. Waters with higher aragonite saturation state tend to be better able to support shellfish, coral and other species that use this mineral to build and maintain their shells and other hard parts. This study shows that aragonite saturation state in waters shallower than 328 feet or 100 meters depth decreased by an average of 0.4 percent per year from the decade spanning 1989–1998 to the decade spanning 1998–2010. “A decline in the saturation state of carbonate minerals, especially aragonite, is a good indicator of a rise in ocean acidification,” said Li-Qing Jiang, an oceanographer with NOAA’s Cooperative Institute for Climate and Satellites at the University of Maryland and lead author. The most vulnerable areas of the global ocean are being hit with a double whammy of sorts. In these areas, deep ocean waters that are naturally rich in carbon dioxide are upwelling and mixing with surface waters that are absorbing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. The carbon dioxide from the atmosphere is coming primarily from human-caused fossil fuel emissions. “When oyster larvae are born they must draw on the energy in their yolk to build their aragonite shells to protect themselves from predators and grow into healthy adults,” said Feely. In waters depleted of carbonate ions, young oysters must expend more energy to build their shell and may not survive. This has significant consequences for the seafood industry.” To read the research in the American Geophysical Union journal Global Biogeochemical Cycles, “Climatological distribution of aragonite saturation in the global oceans,” please go online to: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2015GB005198/full For access to the data used in the study, please see the archive of NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information: http://data.nodc.noaa.gov/geoportal/rest/find/document?searchText=%22GLODAP%22&f=searchPage For more information, please contact Monica Allen, director of public affairs for NOAA Research at 301-734-1123 or by email at monica.allen@noaa.gov Previous Article NOAA awards $48 million to advance climate research, improve community resilience Next Article NOAA’s Ko Barrett elected vice chair of international climate science panel Print 23579 Tags: AGU American Geophysical Union Carbon Dioxide CO2 Cooperative Institutes marine ecosystems ocean acidification shellfish Documents to download Climatological distribution of aragonite saturation state in the global oceans(.pdf, 0 B) - 3809 download(s) Jiang_et_al_2015 More links Climatological distribution of aragonite saturation state in the global oceansAGU Publications: Global Biogeochemical Cycles National Oceanographic Data Center SearchNODC Search Portal Related articles Deforestation, warming flip part of Amazon forest from carbon sink to source NOAA initiatives among the first round of Ocean Decade endorsed actions NOAA names Oregon State University to host new institute for marine research Carbon dioxide peaks near 420 parts per million at Mauna Loa observatory Meet 5 NOAA buoys that help scientists understand our weather, climate and ocean health
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