NOAA:
Atlantic Ocean off
150 years
Northeast U.S. warmest in
150 years
A
new report shows the greatest jump in sea surface temperatures
measured
27
April, 2013
Atlantic
sea-surface temperatures off the U.S. Northeast coast during the
second half of 2012 were the highest recorded in 150 years,
according to a
report released
on April 25 by NOAA’s Northeast Fisheries Science Center.
A
deviation in average temperature by more than a degree is uncommon;
this increase, from the average of 54.3 degrees F. over past 30
years to 57.2 degrees F. in the second half of last year is the
highest jump measured. It is also an amount of warming not seen in
any other ocean.
Warming
ocean temperatures off the Northeast have meant changing
distributions of
some fish populations; black sea bass and summer flounder are among
the species shifting northeastward.
One
NOAA scientist said while it’s not yet clear what these findings
will mean for the Northeast Shelf ecosystem and its marine life,
that ecosystem is changing.
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