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Ocean acidification

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Introduction: coccolithophores Effects on oceanic chemistry Effects on biology Discussion and conclusions Coccolithophores Etymology: carrying round stones ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ocean acidification


1
  • Introduction coccolithophores
  • Effects on oceanic chemistry
  • Effects on biology
  • Discussion and conclusions

2
Coccolithophores
  • Etymology carrying round stones
  • Characteristics
  • Free drifting photosynthetic Phytoplankton
    (phylum Haptophyta)
  • One of the most abundant marine calcifying
    phytoplankton
  • Building of calcium carbonate scales (coccoliths)
  • Ca2 CO32- ? CaCO3
  • Ca2 2HCO3- ? CaCO3 H2O CO2

3
Coccolithophores
  • Favorable conditions cause algae blooms, with a
    overproduction of coccoliths
  • During a bloom the water turns an opaque
    turquoise (white waters)
  • Growth is not inhibited by high UV light, such as
    other phytoplankton species
  • Diameter of 5-10 µm

4
Coccolithophores
  • Occurrence
  • Mostly in upper layers of sub polar regions
  • Nutrient poor and mild temperature waters

Satellite image of a bloom in the English Channel
off coast of Cornwall (24 July 1999)
The Coccolithophore Emiliana huxleyi
5
Effects on oceanic chemistry
  • Pre-industrial atmospheric CO2 280 ppm
  • Today atmospheric CO2 380 ppm
  • ?CO2 obeys Henrys law
  • CO2(atmosphere) ? ? CO2(surface oceans)
  • Dissolution of CO2 into seawater releases
    hydrogen ions and therefore causes ocean
    acidification
  • ? In the past 200 years the oceans absorbed 50
    of CO2 emitted by human activities (gt500 Gt C02)
  • ? pH decrease of 0,1 units since pre-industrial
    times

6
Effects on oceanic chemistry
  • Oceanic absorption of atmospheric CO2 relevant
    processes

7
Effects on oceanic chemistry
  • pH range of seawater 8,2 0,3 (today)
  • Relative proportions of the 3 main inorganic
    forms of CO2 dissolved in seawater
  • - CO2 (aq) (including H2CO3) 1
  • - HCO3- 91
  • - CO32- 8

8
Effects on calcium carbonate and saturation
horizons
  • Solubility of CaCO3 ? temperature, pressure
    (depth) increasing solubility by decreasing
    temperature and increasing depth
  • ? Result of these variables development of
    natural boundary in seawater called saturation
    horizon
  • Dissolution of CO2 decreases CO32-, because
    carbonate ions react with protons to become
    bicarbonate (HCO3-)
  • Equilibrium shifts to the right
  • (Dissolution)

9
Effects on calcium carbonate and saturation
horizons
  • Increasing CO2 levels (and resultant lower pH) of
    seawater decreases the saturation state of CaCO3
    and raises the saturation horizon closer to the
    surface
  • Two main forms of calcium carbonate aragonite
    and calcite

Aragonite Calcite
Structure orthorhombic trigonal
Solubility high low
Calcifying species Corals, pterods, macroalgae Foraminifera, macroalgae, coccolithophores, crustacea
10
  • Saturation horizon of calcite and aragonite
  • Aragonite SH nearer the surface of the oceans
    because higher solubility than calcite
  • Calcifying organisms producing aragonite form of
    CaCO3 are more vulnerable to changes in ocean
    acidity

11
Ocean acidification vs. chemistry of nutrients
and toxins
  • Metals exist in two forms in seawater complex
    and free dissolved
  • ?pH
  • - generally increases the proportion of free
    dissolved forms (most toxic forms)
  • - release of bound metals from the sediment to
    the water column
  • - effects on nutrient speciation (phosphate,
    ammonia, iron, silicate)

12
Ocean acidification past and future
  • Ocean acidification is essential an irreversible
    process during our lifetimes
  • Fastest natural change in atmospheric CO2 at the
    end of the recent ice age
  • ?CO2 80 ppm in 6000 years
  • Current change occur 100 folder stronger

Changes in ocean pH are outside the range of
natural variability ? They could have a
substantial affect on biological processes in the
surface oceans
13
Effects on biology
  • Photosynthesis (POC)

Laboratory
Field
14
Effects on biology
  • Calcification

Laboratory
Field
15
Effects on biology
  • Calcite/POC

Laboratory
Field
16
Effects on biology
  • Malformation

G. oceanica
E. Huxleyi
300 ppm
780-850 ppm
17
Effects on biology
  • Negative feedback for atmospheric CO2
  • Reduced calcification leads to reduced CO2
    production from calcification. This results in an
    increased CO2 storage in the upper part of the
    ocean.

18
Effects on biology
  • Also others organisms are affected

19
Effects on biology
20
Changing acidity
21
Changing acidity
Aragonite saturation of surface waters (light
blue oversaturated, purple undersaturated)
22
Approaches to mitigate ocean acidification
  • Addition of alkalinity to the oceans
  • Direct injection of CO2 into the deep oceans
    (CCS-programm carbon capture and storage)
  • Fertilization of the upper oceans with iron
  • Preventing accumulation of CO2 in the atmosphere
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