Life Threatened in Acidic Coastal Waters

Increasing atmospheric CO2 is not only increasing global temperature but also rapidly acidifying seawater through formation of carbonic acid (ocean acidification). Emerging evidence from laboratory research indicates that predicted changes in ocean environments could have profound implications for m...

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Main Authors: Ishimatsu, Atsushi, Dissanayake, Awantha
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: TERRAPUB 2010
Subjects:
CO2
pH
Online Access:https://nagasaki-u.repo.nii.ac.jp/record/15602/files/nu2010283.pdf
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spelling ftnagasakiuniv:oai:nagasaki-u.repo.nii.ac.jp:00015602 2024-09-15T18:01:41+00:00 Life Threatened in Acidic Coastal Waters Ishimatsu, Atsushi Dissanayake, Awantha 2010 application/pdf https://nagasaki-u.repo.nii.ac.jp/record/15602/files/nu2010283.pdf eng eng TERRAPUB 9784887041516 BB01538341 Coastal Environmental and Ecosystem Issues of the East China Sea 283 303 https://nagasaki-u.repo.nii.ac.jp/record/15602/files/nu2010283.pdf © by TERRAPUB and Nagasaki University, 2010. ocean acidification CO2 pH coastal environment estuary early development VoR 2010 ftnagasakiuniv 2024-08-23T06:19:39Z Increasing atmospheric CO2 is not only increasing global temperature but also rapidly acidifying seawater through formation of carbonic acid (ocean acidification). Emerging evidence from laboratory research indicates that predicted changes in ocean environments could have profound implications for marine ecosystem, however, it is relatively unclear how marine biota will respond to ocean warming and acidification. Furthermore, most published papers have used future atmospheric CO2 concentration in their experimental protocols, ignoring spatial heterogeneity of seawater carbonate chemistry, which is most manifested in coastal regions and deep sea. This paper first summarizes empirical evidence on effects of CO2 on marine organisms, and then discusses the importance of considering local CO2 conditions to improve our prediction ability on the fate of marine organisms in acidified oceans. Marine molluscs have been shown to be highly sensitive to elevations of ambient CO2, in particular during larval shell formation. In addition, data have been accumulated on sublethal impacts on morphology, physiology and behavior. Early development of echinoderms are also significantly affected by elevations of seawater pCO2, however, there seems to be a difference in interspecies CO2 sensitivity from different latitudes and also a high intra-species sensitivity. Gonad development can be severely impacted by high CO2. As compared with CO2 sensitivity known for molluscs and echinoderms, some crustaceans, particularly copepods and amphipods, and fish appear to be less vulnerable to CO2. Anthropogenic impacts on coastal environment are multifaceted and complex. Scientific endeavor is of utmost necessity to secure this most productive marine region. Investigations reflecting local biotic and abiotic conditions are needed to precisely predict how coastal ecosystem will shape in the face of changing environment. Nagasaki University Major Research Project: Restoration of Marine Environment and Resources in East Asia Coastal ... Other/Unknown Material Carbonic acid Ocean acidification Copepods NAOSITE: Nagasaki University Academic Output SITE
institution Open Polar
collection NAOSITE: Nagasaki University Academic Output SITE
op_collection_id ftnagasakiuniv
language English
topic ocean acidification
CO2
pH
coastal environment
estuary
early development
spellingShingle ocean acidification
CO2
pH
coastal environment
estuary
early development
Ishimatsu, Atsushi
Dissanayake, Awantha
Life Threatened in Acidic Coastal Waters
topic_facet ocean acidification
CO2
pH
coastal environment
estuary
early development
description Increasing atmospheric CO2 is not only increasing global temperature but also rapidly acidifying seawater through formation of carbonic acid (ocean acidification). Emerging evidence from laboratory research indicates that predicted changes in ocean environments could have profound implications for marine ecosystem, however, it is relatively unclear how marine biota will respond to ocean warming and acidification. Furthermore, most published papers have used future atmospheric CO2 concentration in their experimental protocols, ignoring spatial heterogeneity of seawater carbonate chemistry, which is most manifested in coastal regions and deep sea. This paper first summarizes empirical evidence on effects of CO2 on marine organisms, and then discusses the importance of considering local CO2 conditions to improve our prediction ability on the fate of marine organisms in acidified oceans. Marine molluscs have been shown to be highly sensitive to elevations of ambient CO2, in particular during larval shell formation. In addition, data have been accumulated on sublethal impacts on morphology, physiology and behavior. Early development of echinoderms are also significantly affected by elevations of seawater pCO2, however, there seems to be a difference in interspecies CO2 sensitivity from different latitudes and also a high intra-species sensitivity. Gonad development can be severely impacted by high CO2. As compared with CO2 sensitivity known for molluscs and echinoderms, some crustaceans, particularly copepods and amphipods, and fish appear to be less vulnerable to CO2. Anthropogenic impacts on coastal environment are multifaceted and complex. Scientific endeavor is of utmost necessity to secure this most productive marine region. Investigations reflecting local biotic and abiotic conditions are needed to precisely predict how coastal ecosystem will shape in the face of changing environment. Nagasaki University Major Research Project: Restoration of Marine Environment and Resources in East Asia Coastal ...
format Other/Unknown Material
author Ishimatsu, Atsushi
Dissanayake, Awantha
author_facet Ishimatsu, Atsushi
Dissanayake, Awantha
author_sort Ishimatsu, Atsushi
title Life Threatened in Acidic Coastal Waters
title_short Life Threatened in Acidic Coastal Waters
title_full Life Threatened in Acidic Coastal Waters
title_fullStr Life Threatened in Acidic Coastal Waters
title_full_unstemmed Life Threatened in Acidic Coastal Waters
title_sort life threatened in acidic coastal waters
publisher TERRAPUB
publishDate 2010
url https://nagasaki-u.repo.nii.ac.jp/record/15602/files/nu2010283.pdf
genre Carbonic acid
Ocean acidification
Copepods
genre_facet Carbonic acid
Ocean acidification
Copepods
op_relation 9784887041516
BB01538341
Coastal Environmental and Ecosystem Issues of the East China Sea
283
303
https://nagasaki-u.repo.nii.ac.jp/record/15602/files/nu2010283.pdf
op_rights © by TERRAPUB and Nagasaki University, 2010.
_version_ 1810438773655207936