Space Industry and Business News  
Climate change: Acid oceans transform marine life, says study

by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) March 9, 2009
Ocean acidification driven by climate change is stripping away the protective shell of tiny yet vital organisms that absorb huge amounts of carbon pollution from the atmosphere, a new study has revealed.

Since the start of the Industrial Revolution, the calcium carapace of microscopic animals called foraminifera living in the Southern Ocean have fallen in weight by a third, the study found.

The amoeba-like organisms, about the size of a grain of sand, live in the surface waters of oceans around the world.

They are an important part of the ecological chain and also provide a bulwark against global warming.

They transform carbon dioxide (CO2) from the air into calcium-based shells. When they die, their carbon-rich shells sink to the ocean floor, effectively storing the atmospheric CO2 forever.

Previous studies have shown that other marine animals, notably corals, are losing their ability to form exoskeletons from calcium.

However, the potential causes for this are tangled, and include rising temperatures and nutrient runoff from coastal agriculture as well as acidification.

This is the first study to look specifically at acidification and pin it to greenhouse-gas pollution, which is driven especially by the invisible product of burning oil, gas and coal.

"It is the invasion of anthropogenic (man-made) CO2 that is causing this particular source of acidification," said co-author William Howard of the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Center in Hobart, Tasmania.

Howard's team collected shells of one foraminifera species, Globigerina bulloides, as they drifted toward the sea floor, and compared them to older specimens that had sunk several hundred years earlier.

The newer shells had 30-to-35 percent less mass, they reported in the online edition of the journal Nature Geoscience.

"If forams and other shell makers are not making shells, that might change the transfer of carbon from the surface ocean into the deep ocean," said Howard.

"It changes the efficiency of the biological pump, and would tend to lessen the degree to which the ocean takes up carbon. That's a feedback that we have to be concerned about," he said in a phone interview.

Only in the last five years have scientists become aware of the extent of ocean acidification and its potential to disrupt Earth's carbon cycle, which balances the absorption and release of CO2 into the atmospshere.

"The problem with this impact is that it is so persistent and so long-lived, unlike other pollution carbons. We will have a harder time turning this impact around," Howard said.

The geo-chemical mechanisms that buffer acidification work very slowly, he explained.

"It is like taking an antacid tablet for an upset stomach and then having to wait hundreds -- or thousands -- of years for it to work."

If the loss of shell mass threatens the survival of the amoeba-like creatures, it could also disrupt a food chain reaching from the plankton they eat, all the way up to large sea mammal such as whales.

"We don't know yet what those impacts might be," Howard said.

Related Links
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


China builds extreme-depth underwater craft: state media
Beijing (AFP) March 9, 2009
China has completed an extreme-depth underwater craft capable of sending researchers 7,000 metres (23,100 feet) deep, state media said Monday.







  • Obama nominates tech executive to be FCC chair
  • Analysis: EU to listen in on Skype calls?
  • Google introduces ads to Google News
  • Mobile phone showcase reveals trends to watch

  • LRO Launch Update
  • Herschel And Planck Launch Postponed
  • Four Launches From Esrange Space Center In Four Days
  • Third Ariane 5 For Launch In 2009 Delivered To French Guiana

  • National hypersonic science centers named
  • First China-assembled Airbus set for June delivery: report
  • China's large passenger jet ready in eight years: report
  • British, Chinese firms seal major aviation deal

  • FCS Program Completes Integrated Mission Test-1
  • General Dynamics Completes WIN-T Test
  • Raytheon Reaches Key Milestones With Troposcatter Solution
  • Russian military satellite in orbit after launch

  • Engineers Crack Ceramics Production Obstacle
  • SSTL Delivers On Russian KANOPUS Missions
  • Russian General Says US May Have Planned Satellite Collision
  • Outside View: Radar shield at risk

  • Rob Peckham Joins SpaceX As VP Of Business Development
  • Raytheon Makes Executive Changes In Space Business
  • George Preston Chosen For 2009 Henry Norris Russell Lectureship
  • Stevens New Director Of Communications And Public Outreach For Space Foundation

  • Satellite Spies On Tree-Eating Bugs
  • CALIPSO Finds Smoke At High Altitudes Down Under
  • NASA Launches Eyes On The Earth 3-D
  • Scientists Expose Buried Fault That Caused Deadly 2003 Quake

  • Next Gen Tacter-31D Rugged Dismountable Vehicular Computer
  • Pay-As-You-Drive System Could Renew Aging Infrastructure
  • GeoSpatial Experts Introduces New Photo-Mapping Software
  • Tele Atlas Expands Global Coverage

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement