Climate
Change's 'Evil Twin' to Harm for '10s of 1000s of Years'
New
comprehensive study outlines rapidly acidifying Arctic Ocean caused
by CO2 emissions
By Andrea Germanos, staff writer
6
May, 2013
The
rapidly acidifying Arctic Ocean caused by absorbing the world's CO2
emissions have pushed us beyond "critical thresholds," with
widespread impacts to be felt for "tens of thousands of years"
even if we stopped emissions, say scientists.
The
three-year assessment from a team of international scientists is
being released at the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme's
(AMAP) International Conference on Arctic Ocean Acidification
starting Monday in Bergen, Norway, and details how the phenomenon
dubbed "climate change's evil twin" is causing a global
problem.
"The
ocean has been performing a huge climate service over the last 200
years by having a great capacity to absorb CO2. It has taken up 50
percent of the CO2 that we have emitted and is currently still taking
up 25 percent of the CO2 that we are producing", stated Richard
Bellerby, Research Scientist at the Norwegian Institute for Water
Research.
Norway's
Center for International Climate and Environmental Research explains
that the acidity of surface ocean waters has increased by about 30
percent over the last 200 years, with CO2 being more readily absorbed
by colder waters.
"Arctic
ocean acidification is happening at a faster rate than found in
other global regions. This is because climate change such as warming
and freshening of the oceans is acting in tandem with the enormous
oceanic uptake of C02," said Bellerby.
“We
have already passed critical thresholds," warned Bellerby. "Even
if we stop emissions now, acidification will last tens of thousands
of years. It is a very big experiment.”
Sam
Dupont, Researcher at the University of Gothenburg, says that
"something really unique is happening. This is the first time
that we as humans are changing the whole planet; we are actually
acidifying the whole ocean today."
"The
most optimistic prediction," Dupont says, "tells us that
within few decades, by the end of this century, the ocean will be two
times more acidic. And we also know that it might be even faster in
the Arctic."
The
impacts of this acidification will be widespread, as Dupont explains.
"One
example of potential species extinction is the brittle star. If you
expose the eggs of this species to the conditions that we can expect
within decades in term of ocean acidification, they all die within
days. And you may not care if this species disappears but if this one
disappears other will be impacted too, the ones that are feeding on
them. Scientists think that similar kinds of effects can happen in
the Arctic, and that it can even maybe be worse in the Arctic."

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