Shells turn brittle
Shells turn brittle
Carbon emissions harm marine organisms
studies linking an increase in the levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide to the acidification of oceans are widely reported and accepted. The effects of acidification on marine life are not well understood. A team showed a direct link between ocean acidification and decrease in the weights of calcareous shells of microplanktons.
Scientists from the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystem Cooperative Research Centre, Tasmania, compared weights of modern forams (single-celled calcite-secreting marine animals) collected from sediment traps in the Southern Ocean with weights of shells preserved in the underlying Holocene-aged (Holocene is the geological era that began 11,700 years ago) sediments. The modern forams weighed 30-35 per cent less than the older ones. The shells of these microplanktons form a significant sink for calcium carbonate in the oceans. A subsequent decrease in the number of the microplanktons would impact the structural and functional organization of the marine ecosystem. The study, reported in the March 8 issue of Nature Geoscience, said monitoring changes in calcium carbonate production by the forams will reveal effects of climate change on the marine food chain.
Marine organisms like corals and molluscs also have calcium carbonate skeletons.