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Science/Tech See other Science/Tech Articles Title: Acidic Oceans Ahead. Plan Wisely. The sharp increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide over the past two centuries years is transforming the chemistry of the world's oceans: As they have soaked up excess CO2, the pH balance of seawater -- the extent to which it is "acid" versus "basic" -- has shifted toward the more acidic. "Climate change and ocean acidification are two sides of the same coin," says Sarah Cooley, a postdoc in marine chemistry and geochemistry at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. "Ocean acidification comes from the rising carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, and so does climate change, but at that point they diverge" into very different patterns of cause-and-effect. As the ocean's carbon dioxide load is increasing, the amount of carbonate minerals in the water is decreasing, with the potential to render the marine environment a lot less hospitable to many animals. Over the next 90 years, this may well cause enormous economic losses worldwide, with the impacts reverberating very strongly through coastal communities. Community leaders have tended not recognize the potential for ocean acidification to disrupt both economies and quality of life. In the December 2009 issue of the journal Oceanography, Cooley and colleagues offer the beginnings of a framework for thinking through such challenges. "One thing that we hope that we're contributing is a look at what ocean acidification could do from a communities perspective," she says, to help planners and policymakers think about a complex scientific issue in terms they're most familiar with: dollars and cents. "Assuming you could track a dollar through the economy, it could go all these different routes," says Cooley. "It might pay for a shellfish ornament" at a tourist gift shop, "but it might also pay for a dentist or a lawyer or a teacher." A failing shellfish fishery doesn't just mean fewer scallops for dinner at a fine restaurant. It may lead to closing schools, reducing public services, and an exodus of population to find work. "When you pose things in these terms, people stop and think, 'I didn't think about the possible effects on schools. I didn't consider that not just tourists, but also the service industries might be influenced...that could be me, that could be my neighbor.' Cooley says her work borrows a great deal from the work ecological economists are doing in anticipating the economic and social costs of global warming. "We're borrowing a page from their playbook and doing the same in terms of ocean acidification." The economic impacts of ocean acidification may well be in the billions and trillions of dollars. Corals need carbonate minerals to build their hard branching shells. If changing marine pH levels affect coral reefs, they will be less able to protect shorelines from tides and storms, or provide fish habitat. These ecosystem services add up to an estimated $30 billion annually. Vanishing corals would also weaken the tourist economies of many nations. Cooley profiles the potential costs to Tobago, where coral reef tourism directly and indirectly generates about 30 percent of the island's gross domestic product. Fisheries, the main source of protein for around one billion people worldwide, will also be harmed by a more acidic ocean. Since myriad organisms up and down the food chain depend upon carbonate minerals to build their protective shells -- ranging from tiny foraminifera, which are at the base of the marine food chain, to species like scallops, oysters, clams, and mussels -- both shellfish and finfish species will both be at risk. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that the combined value of wild and farmed fisheries worldwide is around $170 billion a year. Despite the bleak scenarios intrinsic in her study -- disappearing fish, fewer jobs, and unraveling communities (not to mention a shortage of seashell-covered ashtrays) -- Cooley emphasizes that her work is meant to inspire pragmatism, not despair. "We need to be thinking ahead toward changes, not necessarily extinctions or catastrophic events," she says. "The point is not that 'All ocean life isn't gong to disappear.' It's like defensive driving-- you take precautions now so you won't have an accident later." Image: "Calculated saturation states of aragonite, a form of calcium carbonate often used by calcifying organisms. Shades of red indicate areas where levels are so low that organisms may be unable to make new shells or skeletons, and where most unprotected aragonite structures will dissolve. By the end of this century, polar and temperate oceans may no longer contain enough aragonite to support the growth of calcifying organisms such as some mollusks, crustaceans, and corals.
Poster Comment: Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 3.
#3. To: buckeroo (#0)
This is significant. The acidic rise in some bodies of water has already caused coral rock to erode and some forms of sea life to leave (or vanish), while - sometimes - other forms of sea life move in. Ultimately this may make some edible fish unavailable, as least at affordable prices. And there will be a disruption of the usual food chain which could have serious long-range effects.
#5. To: Shoonra (#3)
My wife and I enjoy having a plate of oysters on occasion. Those days are going away and only the super-rich are going to have the delicacy because the harvest yields shall become so small in the not too distant future.
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