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About half of the carbon dioxide produced by burning fossil fuels
is absorbed by the oceans. However,
increases in the amount of carbon dioxide being absorbed is changing the basic
chemistry of the oceans. Once in
seawater carbon dioxide undergoes a chemical transformation to carbonic
acid. This phenomenon, known as "ocean
acidification,"decreases the availability of chemical building blocks needed by
organisms that produce shells and skeletons made of the calcium carbonate.
Sadly, scientists have found that almost all marine life
that build calcium carbonate shells and skeletons that have been studied have
shown deterioration due to increasing carbon dioxide levels in sea water. For example, acidification has been shown to
significantly reduce the ability of reef-building corals to produce their skeletons.
Known as "ocean acidification," over time this phenomenon is having major
negative impacts on corals and other marine life. This has affected the growth
of individual corals and made reefs more vulnerable to erosion. It is predicted that by the middle of the 21st
century coral reefs may well erode faster than they can be rebuilt.
Other species, such as sea urchins, starfish, lobsters ad
bivalves (oysters, clams, mussels, and scallops) that construct shells or
skeletons could also be jeopardized.
Some higher marine life forms, including some fish, may be affected by
acidification through a process called acidosis - carbonic acid buildup in body
fluids. Acidosis can lead to lowered
immune response, metabolic decline and reproductive respiratory difficulties.
In short, the impacts of ocean acidification on shelled
organisms and higher marine life forms could negatively affect marine food
webs, and when combined with other aspects of climatic change, could
substantially alter the number, variety and health of ocean wildlife and the human
community's dependent upon them.
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