Think about your own lungs filled with emissions gasping for breath. Destroying our natural capital destroys us and the economic stability these assets offer.
Oceans Gasping for Breath, Oxygen Running Low!
Rising levels of CO2 are making it hard for fish to breathe in addition to exacerbating global warming and ocean acidification.
Climate change has caused a drop in the amount of oxygen dissolved
in the oceans in some parts of the world, and those effects should
become evident across large parts of the ocean between 2030 and 2040,
according to a new study led by researchers at the National Center for
Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colorado.
The oceans receive their oxygen supply from the surface via the
atmosphere or from phytoplankton, which release oxygen in the water by
photosynthesis.
When the oceans are warmed they absorb less oxygen and marine life
tend to move more slowly. The oxygen that is absorbed has a harder time
reaching deeper into the ocean because when water heats up, it expands
and becomes lighter than the water below it and is less likely to sink,
according to the National Science Foundation report.
Curtis Deutsch, associate professor at the University of
Washington’s School of Oceanography, studies how increasing global
temperatures are altering the levels of dissolved oxygen in the world’s
oceans.
Scientists have been warning that decreasing amounts of available
oxygen will increase stress on a range of species, even as they also
face the effects of rising temperatures and ocean acidification.
"Since oxygen concentrations in the ocean naturally vary depending
on variations in winds and temperature at the surface, it's been
challenging to attribute any deoxygenation to climate change. This new
study tells us when we can expect the effect from climate change to
overwhelm the natural variability," said lead author Matthew Long of
NCAR.
The researchers discovered that deoxygenation caused by climate
change could already be detected in the southern Indian Ocean and parts
of the eastern tropical Pacific and Atlantic basins.
However, the study shows that at least in some parts of the
ocean—including areas off the east coasts of Africa, Australia, and
Southeast Asia—deoxygenation from climate change may not be evident even
by 2100.
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