No no... not like this:
Hallucination Generation (1966) - *You* are invited to a pill party.
Description: Movie trailer. You will experience every jolt...every jar
of a Psychedelic Circus...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxSIbMZPWrI&mode=related&search=

This... (Buuuummmmeeerrrrr Duuuuuudddddeeeee!)


Tuesday, 8 August 2006, 11:08 am
Press Release: Jon Sumby
Antarctica does Acid
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/print.html?path=SC0608/S00021.htm


Sea Acidification Model Chart, Year 2099
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/images/0608/2d07c4d52743226e2856.jpeg

An idea that has been around since the 1980s has been confirmed by
experiments and careful modeling based on recent measurements of the
global levels of carbon dioxide: the 'greenhouse' gas. The oceans are
becoming acidic. This is a serious threat to marine ecosystems,
especially the Southern Ocean. The animals that make up the bottom of
the food chain may disappear from the Southern Ocean, which will make
big changes to the Antarctic ecosystem up to, and including, whales.

Gases in our atmosphere exist in equilibrium with the oceans, following
a physical rule known as 'Henry's Law'. The amount of carbon dioxide in
the atmosphere is in proportion to the amount of carbon dioxide that is
dissolved in water. In pre-industrial times ocean life generated excess
carbon dioxide which then was released into the atmosphere to reach a
balance.

Now this has changed. With the increasing levels of carbon dioxide
emitted by our fossil fuel burning society, more carbon dioxide is
entering the ocean than is leaving it. The ocean absorbs about one
million tonnes of carbon dioxide every hour, which is about ten times
the natural pre-industrial rate. This carbon dioxide 'sink' into the
ocean is the 'buffer' that has slowed the rate of global warming. It is
estimated that the oceans have absorbed about 30% of the carbon dioxide
released by our industrial society. In the next 50 years or so, the
oceans will be absorbing about 80% of the carbon generated by human
society, especially if no changes are made to reduce our generation of
carbon dioxide.

This comes at a price. When carbon dioxide gas dissolves into seawater,
it makes the water more acidic. At the same time, the increasing
concentration of dissolved carbon dioxide reduces the concentration of
dissolved calcium carbonate that is available to marine life in the ocean.

What does this mean?

If you are small and float in the ocean, a way to protect yourself is by
having a shell. Just like corals, most of these small animals make their
shells out of calcium carbonate. When they die these shells fall to the
bottom. In England, the famous White Cliffs of Dover are made from these
shells, which gives you an idea of how many of these animals live and
die in the sea. In the ocean, these little animals are among the most
important part of the ecosystem. They make up a critical part of the
food chain. Other small animals eat them, then small or baby fish eat
those animals, then other predators eat these small or baby fish, and so on.

With increased acidity two things happen; there is less carbonate
available so these animals can't make their shells easily, and then the
increased acidity erodes and weakens these shells by making them more
brittle.

So there's less carbonate; what's the catch?

In a similar way to the balance of carbon dioxide between air and water,
the sea maintains a physical balance of calcium carbonate. In the past
the oceans were 'saturated' with calcium carbonate and marine organisms
had an abundance of calcium carbonate to use. Coral reefs grew strong
and big and the enormous blooms (sometimes thousands of square
kilometres) of the small planktonic floating animals could make their
shells.

As the levels of carbon dioxide in the seawater change, the point where
the oceans are saturated with carbonate changes and the water becomes
under-saturated; the amounts of calcium carbonate available to animals
is not enough. When this happens, animals that use calcium carbonate
can't make their shells very well, if they can make their shells at all.
So they disappear.

The danger for the Southern Ocean

Recent experimental evidence and careful modeling show that polar
regions will be the first and worst affected by this change. In past
years, the belief was that a change in calcium carbonate levels would
take hundreds of years to appear, but recent work shows that
ecologically destructive changes can happen in decades- between 2050 and
2099. It sounds like a long time away, but your children will live in
this new world. In the temperate and tropical parts of the World,
calcium carbonate is abundant. Things are different in the Southern Ocean.

In the Southern Ocean, because of ocean dynamics, only one form of
calcium carbonate is readily available for small marine animals. This is
'aragonite', and Antarctic animals rely on it. One of the most abundant
animals is the pteropod, a tiny type of mollusk, or snail. It is at the
bottom of the food chain and many animals, depend on it as food. Current
research shows that by 2099, aragonite will not be available for
pteropods to make their shells. They are likely to disappear.

So they're gone, so what?

As a foundation of the food chain, a loss of pteropods will affect all
other life. The abundance or availability of fish will change, which
will affect animals like other fish, penguins, and seals. The abundance
of krill will change, altering local ecosystems that rely on them for
food and affect whales that migrate to feed in Antarctica. The attached
picture tells the story: Where it is blue, there is not enough aragonite
for the small animals, the pteropods, to live and grow shells. They will
vanish. This picture is the middle, or median, estimate of ten models
that were calculated. These ten models ranged from minimum additional
levels of industrial carbon dioxide into the ocean; based on the most
minor of climate change, to the highest climate change estimates.

Is this the Future?

In the 1980s, Dr Richard Feely wrote about the effects of altered carbon
dioxide on seawater chemistry. These chemical effects are well known and
measurable and it is basic science. Now we have good measurements and
trends that we can fit with the ecosystems and changes. In the Southern
Ocean aragonite is what used by key species in the food chain. It is
difficult to extrapolate what changes might happen when they go, but the
changes will be wide-ranging and profound and will happen in your, or
your child's, lifetime. Researchers have run experiments where they have
watched pteropod shells dissolve when the seawater gets acidic at levels
of carbon dioxide that will be reached in fifty years. The problem with
global warming is that it's a growth game. The earlier we make cuts to
greenhouse gases the less reductions we have to make. If our society
continues on as usual, the bigger the reduction in carbon dioxide our
children have to make. It is a feedback. The less we do now the more we
have to do later. This is also seen in the response: Just a few years
ago, scientists were estimating the melting of the Antarctic ice sheets
in the thousands of years, now they say it is a few hundred.

A certain thing

Most marine scientists are concerned. The acid ocean will alter coral
reefs and change ocean ecosystems. This is known and has been documented
in experiments. The change to the Southern Ocean will, by all
indications, be devastating and fundamental.

More information:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?
cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=16193043&dopt=Abstract

http://www.research.noaa.gov/spotlite/archive/spot_gcc.html

http://www2.cnrs.fr/en/377.htm?debut=48

http://www.precaution.org/lib/06/ocean_acidification_from_c02_060301.pdf

--30--

Reply via email to