| Literature DB >> 22869801 |
Phillip Williamson1, Carol Turley.
Abstract
Fundamental changes to marine chemistry are occurring because of increasing carbon dioxide (CO(2)) in the atmosphere. Ocean acidity (H(+) concentration) and bicarbonate ion concentrations are increasing, whereas carbonate ion concentrations are decreasing. There has already been an average pH decrease of 0.1 in the upper ocean, and continued unconstrained carbon emissions would further reduce average upper ocean pH by approximately 0.3 by 2100. Laboratory experiments, observations and projections indicate that such ocean acidification may have ecological and biogeochemical impacts that last for many thousands of years. The future magnitude of such effects will be very closely linked to atmospheric CO(2); they will, therefore, depend on the success of emission reduction, and could also be constrained by geoengineering based on most carbon dioxide removal (CDR) techniques. However, some ocean-based CDR approaches would (if deployed on a climatically significant scale) re-locate acidification from the upper ocean to the seafloor or elsewhere in the ocean interior. If solar radiation management were to be the main policy response to counteract global warming, ocean acidification would continue to be driven by increases in atmospheric CO(2), although with additional temperature-related effects on CO(2) and CaCO(3) solubility and terrestrial carbon sequestration.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22869801 PMCID: PMC3405667 DOI: 10.1098/rsta.2012.0167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci ISSN: 1364-503X Impact factor: 4.226
Figure 1.Percentage changes in average global surface ocean ion concentrations resulting from up to a fourfold change (300% increase) in atmospheric carbon dioxide, compared with pre-industrial values and at an assumed uniform and constant upper ocean temperature of 18°C. Values for atmospheric CO2 change from 280 to 1120 ppm; bicarbonate ions from 1770 to 2120 μmol kg−1; carbonate ions from 225 to 81 μmol kg−1; and pH from 8.18 to 7.65 (where pH is defined as the negative decimal logarithm of the hydrogen ion activity, and a linear relationship is assumed between activity and concentration). Adapted from Royal Society [3].
Figure 2.Meta-analysis of the effect of pH decrease by 0.4 units on reproduction, photosynthesis, growth, calcification and survival of a wide range of marine organisms. Mean effect and 95% confidence limits calculated from log-transformed response ratios, here re-converted to a linear scale. Adapted from Kroeker et al. [43].
Summary of probable main effects of future ocean acidification on different groups of marine organisms, mostly based on experimental studies.
| group | main acidification impacts |
|---|---|
| warm-water corals | a relatively well-studied group. The great majority of experiments show that increasing seawater CO2 decreases adult coral calcification and growth, and suppresses larval metabolism and metamorphosis [ |
| cold-water corals | the long-lived nature of cold-water corals, and their proximity to aragonite saturation horizons, makes them vulnerable to future shoaling of the ASH. Approximately 70% of known cold-water coral locations are estimated to be in undersaturated waters by the end of this century [ |
| molluscs | significant effects on growth, immune response and larval survival of some bivalves [ |
| echinoderms | juvenile life stages, egg fertilization and early development can be highly vulnerable, resulting in much reduced survival [ |
| crustaceans | the relative insensitivity of crustaceans to ocean acidification [ |
| foraminifera | shell weight sensitive to |
| fish | adult marine fish are generally tolerant of high CO2 conditions [ |
| coralline algae | meta-analysis [ |
| non-calcified macro-algae; sea grasses | both groups show capability for increased growth [ |
| coccolithophores | most studies have shown reduced calcification in higher CO2 seawater, as first found by [ |
| bacteria | most cyanobacteria (including |
Figure 3.Conceptual representation of possible future ocean acidification impacts on planktonic and benthic organisms, with implications for ecosystems and ecosystem services. DMS, dimethylsulphide; DMSP, dimethylsulphoniopropionate; Ω, saturation state (for CaCO3). Image: T. Tyrrell and P. Williamson.
Figure 4.(a) The relationship between changes in global annual carbon emissions over the period 1800–2500 and (b) global mean surface pH. The pH stabilization levels of 8.10, 8.01, 7.94, 7.87, 7.82 and 7.70 correspond to atmospheric CO2 levels of 350, 450, 550, 650, 750 and 1000 ppm. Dotted lines labelled OSP (overshoot stabilization profile) show pathways requiring negative CO2 emissions (i.e. carbon dioxide removal geoengineering) to achieve atmospheric CO2 stabilization at 350 and 450 ppm; dashed lines labelled DSP (delayed stabilization profile) show delayed approach to emissions reductions to achieve stabilization at 450 and 550 ppm; solid lines labelled SP represent stabilization profiles. From Joos et al. [34], modified by permission of Oxford University Press.
Summary of probable main effects of a range of proposed geoengineering approaches on ocean acidification, assuming climatically significant deployment and in comparison to unabated CO2 emissions. Within approaches, there may be relatively large differences in effects depending on specific details of techniques and their deployment arrangements. Additional details in text. OA, ocean acidification; SRM, solar radiation management; CDR, carbon dioxide reduction.
| SRM or CDR | approach | probable effects and comments | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Techniques that either might slightly ameliorate, or slightly worsen, future OA or have no net effect | SRM | space-based reflection | stabilized temperatures but increased CO2 expected to have adverse direct impact on OA due to effects on solubility of CO2 and CaCO3. However, the comparison is complicated by temperature effects on terrestrial carbon biomass in the non-SRM control [ |
| neither | cirrus cloud manipulation | ||
| SRM | stratospheric aerosols (SO2) | as above, plus effect of decreased pH of precipitation (although likely to be slight [ | |
| SRM | marine cloud brightening | temperature/solubility effects, with increased likelihood of significant impact due to decreased marine primary production due to change in light quantity and quality [ | |
| SRM | ocean surface albedo | ||
| SRM | land surface albedo | temperature/solubility effects, that may vary inter-hemispherically due to asymmetric SRM cooling [ | |
| 2. Techniques that displace OA from ocean surface to mid- or deepwater | CDR | direct ocean fertilization | additional primary production and carbon export would reduce OA in upper ocean but decrease pH in ocean interior. On century-scale, potential for modest net benefit (due to enhanced CaCO3 dissolution at depth) [ |
| CDR | up/downwelling modification | ||
| CDR | direct air capture with ocean storage | potential for severe local OA impacts at site of liquid CO2 injection (both midwater and seafloor have been proposed) [ | |
| 3. Techniques that might counteract OA globally, but with some risk of locally severe deepwater impacts | CDR | direct air capture with sub seafloor storage | small risk of potentially severe OA impacts due to reservoir failure [ |
| CDR | ocean storage of terrestrial biomass | very slow decomposition (with low CO2 release and OA impacts) could be achieved if biomass (e.g. crop waste) is deposited in high-sedimentation sites; e.g. off major river-mouths [ | |
| 4. Techniques that, in theory, could counteract OA, if achievable at necessary scale | CDR | enhanced ocean alkalinity | could directly ameliorate OA at ocean surface, but with local risk of high pH/alkalinity impacts [ |
| CDR | enhanced soil alkalinity | river run-off of minerals and enhanced alkalinity could have second order OA impacts (negative or positive) for coastal areas | |
| CDR | afforestation/ reforestation | if successful in reducing atmospheric CO2, would also reduce future OA without significant unintended side effects on ocean chemistry | |
| CDR | biochar and other techniques to enhance soil C | ||
| CDR | direct air capture with land-based geological storage |