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From: CNRS
Published May 27, 2008 07:29 AM
Ocean Acidification And Its Impact On Ecosystems
Emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) through human activities have a well
known impact on the Earth's climate. What is not so well known is that the
absorption of this CO2 by the oceans is causing inexorable acidification of
sea water. But what impact is this phenomenon having on marine organisms and
ecosystems? This is a question to which researchers have few answers as yet.
That is why the European Union has recently given its support to EPOCA, the
European Project on Ocean Acidification, which will be launched in Nice
(France) on 10 June 2008.
EPOCA's goal is to document ocean acidification, investigate its impact
on biological processes, predict its consequences over the next 100 years,
and advise policy-makers on potential thresholds or tipping points that
should not be exceeded. The project is coordinated by Jean-Pierre Gattuso, a
CNRS researcher at the Oceanography Laboratory at Villefranche-sur-mer
(LOV(1)), and brings together a consortium of 27 partners, including CNRS
and the French Atomic Energy Agency (CEA), from 9 countries. Many of the
leading oceanographic institutions across Europe and more than 100 permanent
scientists are involved. The budget is €16.5 million over 4 years,
including €6.5 million from the European Commission.
Over 71% of the Earth's surface is covered by the oceans, which are home to
an incredibly diverse flora and fauna. They play a key role in regulating
the climate and levels of carbon dioxide (CO2), one of the main greenhouse
gases. Over the last 200 years (since the beginning of the industrial
revolution), the oceans have absorbed about one third of the carbon dioxide
produced by human activities, a total of 120 billion tons. Without this
absorption, the amount of CO2 present in the atmosphere and its effects on
the climate would undoubtedly be far greater.
In fact, over 25 million tons of CO2 dissolve in seawater every day.
However, the oceans do not escape unscathed. When CO2 dissolves in sea
water, it causes the formation of carbonic acid, which leads to a fall in pH
(the pH scale is used to measure acidity(2)). This change is called ocean
acidification and is happening at a rate that has not been experienced
probably for the last 20 million years.
The effects of this huge input of CO2 into the oceans only began to be
studied in the late 1990s(3) and are still poorly understood. One of the
most likely consequences will be slower growth of organisms with calcareous
skeletons, such as corals, mollusks, algae, etc. Obtaining more information
about ocean acidification is a major environmental priority because of the
threat it poses to certain species and ecosystems.
EPOCA should help us to understand the effects of the acidification of sea
water as well as its impact on marine organisms and ecosystems. More
specifically, the project has four goals:
1. Document the changes in ocean chemistry and biogeography across space and
time. Paleo-reconstruction methods will be used on several
natural/biological archives, including foraminifera and deep-sea corals, to
determine past variability in ocean chemistry and to tie these to
present-day chemical and biological observations.
2. Determine the sensitivity of marine organisms, communities and ecosystems
to ocean acidification. Molecular to biochemical, physiological and
ecological approaches will be combined with laboratory and field-based
perturbation experiments to quantify biological responses to ocean
acidification, assess the potential for adaptation, and determine the
consequences for biogeochemical cycling. Laboratory experiments will focus
on key organisms selected on the basis of their ecological, biogeochemical
or socio-economic importance. Field studies will be carried out in systems
(areas/regions) deemed most sensitive to ocean acidification.
3. Integrate results on the impact of ocean acidification on marine
ecosystems in biogeochemical, sediment, and coupled ocean-climate models to
better understand and predict the responses of the Earth system to ocean
acidification. Special attention will be paid to the potential feedbacks of
the physiological changes in the carbon, nitrogen, sulfur and iron cycles.
4. Assess uncertainties, risks and thresholds ("tipping points") related to
ocean acidification at scales ranging from sub-cellular to ecosystem and
local to global. It will also assess the decrease in CO2 emissions required
to avoid these thresholds and describe the change and the subsequent risk to
the marine environment and Earth system, should these emissions be exceeded.
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