THE SOCIOECONOMIC IMPACTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION

participant As humans' atmospheric emissions of carbon dioxide enter the upper ocean, seawater pH and carbonate ion concentration are decreasing in ways that appear to harm some marine creatures that form hard shells or skeletons. This so-called ocean acidification (OA) impacts individual creat...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cooley, Sarah, Lucey, Noelle, Kite-Powell, Hauke, Doney, S. C.
Other Authors: Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI)
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hal.univ-brest.fr/hal-00502327
id ftccsdartic:oai:HAL:hal-00502327v1
record_format openpolar
spelling ftccsdartic:oai:HAL:hal-00502327v1 2023-05-15T17:50:27+02:00 THE SOCIOECONOMIC IMPACTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION Cooley, Sarah Lucey, Noelle Kite-Powell, Hauke Doney, S. C. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) Brest, France 2010-08-23 https://hal.univ-brest.fr/hal-00502327 en eng HAL CCSD hal-00502327 https://hal.univ-brest.fr/hal-00502327 ClimECO2 International Summer School - Oceans, Marine Ecosystems, and Society facing Climate Change https://hal.univ-brest.fr/hal-00502327 ClimECO2 International Summer School - Oceans, Marine Ecosystems, and Society facing Climate Change, Aug 2010, Brest, France [SDU.STU.OC]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Oceanography info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference papers 2010 ftccsdartic 2020-12-26T07:47:22Z participant As humans' atmospheric emissions of carbon dioxide enter the upper ocean, seawater pH and carbonate ion concentration are decreasing in ways that appear to harm some marine creatures that form hard shells or skeletons. This so-called ocean acidification (OA) impacts individual creatures in a range of ways, such as decreasing or delaying calcification, altering photosynthesis, and decreasing reproduction, yet the consequences of OA on populations of these organisms are not well understood yet. This casts a great deal of uncertainty on how human communities may feel the effects of OA, but we hypothesize that humans may experience changes in valuable marine ecosystem services provided by calcifying organisms such as nutrition, support for tourism, or coastal protection. We investigate some of the potential impacts of OA on human communities via commercial fishing revenues, nutrition, and export values, and we find that the negative effects of OA will vary regionally, depending on ecosystem resilience and on human dependence on ecosystem services provided by calcifiers and their predators. We also explore the capacity of human communities to adapt to changing ecosystem services in relation to nations' gross domestic product, governance, and other factors relative to the timing of significant changes in ocean chemistry. Conference Object Ocean acidification Archive ouverte HAL (Hyper Article en Ligne, CCSD - Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe)
institution Open Polar
collection Archive ouverte HAL (Hyper Article en Ligne, CCSD - Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe)
op_collection_id ftccsdartic
language English
topic [SDU.STU.OC]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Oceanography
spellingShingle [SDU.STU.OC]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Oceanography
Cooley, Sarah
Lucey, Noelle
Kite-Powell, Hauke
Doney, S. C.
THE SOCIOECONOMIC IMPACTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION
topic_facet [SDU.STU.OC]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Oceanography
description participant As humans' atmospheric emissions of carbon dioxide enter the upper ocean, seawater pH and carbonate ion concentration are decreasing in ways that appear to harm some marine creatures that form hard shells or skeletons. This so-called ocean acidification (OA) impacts individual creatures in a range of ways, such as decreasing or delaying calcification, altering photosynthesis, and decreasing reproduction, yet the consequences of OA on populations of these organisms are not well understood yet. This casts a great deal of uncertainty on how human communities may feel the effects of OA, but we hypothesize that humans may experience changes in valuable marine ecosystem services provided by calcifying organisms such as nutrition, support for tourism, or coastal protection. We investigate some of the potential impacts of OA on human communities via commercial fishing revenues, nutrition, and export values, and we find that the negative effects of OA will vary regionally, depending on ecosystem resilience and on human dependence on ecosystem services provided by calcifiers and their predators. We also explore the capacity of human communities to adapt to changing ecosystem services in relation to nations' gross domestic product, governance, and other factors relative to the timing of significant changes in ocean chemistry.
author2 Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI)
format Conference Object
author Cooley, Sarah
Lucey, Noelle
Kite-Powell, Hauke
Doney, S. C.
author_facet Cooley, Sarah
Lucey, Noelle
Kite-Powell, Hauke
Doney, S. C.
author_sort Cooley, Sarah
title THE SOCIOECONOMIC IMPACTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION
title_short THE SOCIOECONOMIC IMPACTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION
title_full THE SOCIOECONOMIC IMPACTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION
title_fullStr THE SOCIOECONOMIC IMPACTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION
title_full_unstemmed THE SOCIOECONOMIC IMPACTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION
title_sort socioeconomic impacts of ocean acidification
publisher HAL CCSD
publishDate 2010
url https://hal.univ-brest.fr/hal-00502327
op_coverage Brest, France
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source ClimECO2 International Summer School - Oceans, Marine Ecosystems, and Society facing Climate Change
https://hal.univ-brest.fr/hal-00502327
ClimECO2 International Summer School - Oceans, Marine Ecosystems, and Society facing Climate Change, Aug 2010, Brest, France
op_relation hal-00502327
https://hal.univ-brest.fr/hal-00502327
_version_ 1766157204973420544