A lot of energy is required to heat the oceans 4C
Warm
is the new normal, say Atlantic oceanographers
The
average temperature of the Atlantic Ocean is up
4 degrees compared to last year, according to Dalhousie
University oceanographers.
25
July, 2013
The trend is being traced from the Florida coast up to Newfoundland, affecting native flora and fauna and causing concern among fishermen.
Fisherman
Mark Debaie said he’s never seen water this warm so early in the
year.
“It
was 70.2 degrees there yesterday. A lot warmer than it should be,”
he said.
Warmer
than usual weather has brought some unusual marine visitors to Nova
Scotia waters.
“See
a lot of strange things like jellyfish, lot harder to catch
groundfish," said Debaie.
Dalhousie
University now logs the daily temperature off Nova Scotia’s coast
and oceanographer Boris Worm said what fishermen are noticing is
real.
Worm
said the ocean’s temperature in July is what would be expected in
September, after it’s been heated by the sun all summer.
“We
can track temperature on daily. Water temperature is the most
important variable for marine life," he said.
"It
affects everything from the trajectories of evolution to the
movements of animals to how lobster survive so it has an effect on
fishermen."
In
2012, the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration in the U.S.
reported sea surface temperatures on the northeastern shelf averaged
14 C, the highest temperature recorded in 150 years.
Scientists
say September's temperatures could break those records.
The
Department of Fisheries and Oceans is in the midst of a five-year
$148-million study on climate change, including its effects on fish
and its impact on coastal communities.
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