| Rising Ocean Acidity Slows Marine Fertilisation
AUSTRALIA: August 18, 2008
SYDNEY - Rising acidification of the ocean could reduce fertilisation of
marine invertebrates and might eventually wipe out colonies of sea urchins,
lobsters, mussels and oysters, according to a study.
Scientists knew that ocean acidification was eating away at the shells of
marine animals, but the new study has found that rising acidity hindered
marine sperm from swimming to and fertilising eggs in the ocean.
Climate change and the subsequent acidification of the world's oceans will
significantly reduce the successful fertilisation of certain marine species
by the year 2100, said the report by Australian and Swedish scientists.
"If you look at projected rates (of acidity) for the year 2100, we are
finding a 25 percent reduction in fertilisation," lead-scientist Jane
Williamson from Macquarie University told Reuters on Friday.
"We were completely surprised because people had been looking at the effect
of acidification on calcified structures of marine animals, but there was no
evidence to suggest it was affecting non-calcified structures, like a sperm
or an egg," she said.
The surface of the ocean absorbs up to 30 percent of the world's yearly
emissions of carbon dioxide. Absorbed carbon dioxide forms a weak acid that
is gradually increasing the acidity of the oceans.
The study of sea urchins around southeast Australia found a link between
increased ocean acidity and a reduction in swimming speed and motility of
sea urchin sperm.
The researchers measured sperm swimming speed, sperm motility, fertilisation
success and larval developmental success in sea urchins in normal seawater
with a pH 8.1 and also in water with a pH 7.7, which is projected to be the
level of acidification by 2100.
The experiment found that in water with acidity at 7.7, the sperm swam much
more slowly and began failing to meet the eggs.
Fertilisation fell by 25 percent and in almost 26 percent of cases where
eggs were fertilised they did not survive to develop into larvae, said the
study published in "Current Biology".
"It is widely believed that seawater is chemically well-buffered, but these
results show that the acidification process already well underway may
threaten the viability of many marine species," Williamson said.
She said acidity levels of 7.7 were already occurring in patches of ocean
off the west coast of the United States.
She said that when acidification rose to 7.4, which is projected by 2300,
sea urchins failed to fertilise eggs and died.
"The paper has looked at the projected rates within the next 80 years, but
we have actually looked at higher acidification values and we have had
mortality of the animals," she said.
"What we have now is evidence that the world's marine life is far more
sensitive to ocean acidification than first suspected, and that means our
oceans may be very different places in the not-too-distant future,"
Williamson said. (Editing by David Fogarty)
Story by Michael Perry
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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