Magazine Archive
FREE online issues of Baird Magazines (delayed two months):
| Corals 'could survive a more acidic ocean' |
| Tuesday, 10 April 2012 12:07 |
Corals may be better placed to cope with the gradual acidification of
the worldâs oceans than previously thought â giving rise to hopes that
coral reefs might escape climatic devastation.
In new research published in the journal Nature Climate Change, an
international scientific team has identified a powerful internal
mechanism that could enable some corals and their symbiotic algae to
counter the adverse impact of a more acidic ocean.
As humans release ever-larger amounts of carbon dioxide into the
atmosphere, besides warming the planet, the gas is also turning the
worldâs oceans more acidic â at rates thought to far exceed those seen
during past major extinctions of life. This has prompted strong
scientific interest in finding out which species are most vulnerable,
and which can handle the changed conditions.
In groundbreaking research, a team of scientists from Australiaâs ARC
Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, at the University of
Western Australia and Franceâs Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de
lâEnvironnement, has shown that some marine organisms that form calcium
carbonate skeletons have an in-built mechanism to cope with ocean
acidification â which others appear to lack.
âThe good news is that most corals appear to have this internal ability
to buffer rising acidity of seawater and still form good, solid
skeletons,â says Professor Malcolm McCulloch of CoECRS and UWA. âMarine
organisms that form calcium carbonate skeletons generally produce it in
one of two forms, known as aragonite and calcite.
âOur research broadly suggests that those with skeletons made of
aragonite have the coping mechanism â while those that follow the
calcite pathway generally do less well under more acidic conditions.â
The aragonite calcifiers â such as the well-known corals Porites and
Acropora â have molecular âpumpsâ that enable them to regulate their
internal acid balance, which buffers them from the external changes in
seawater pH.
âBut the picture for coral reefs as a whole isnât quite so
straightforward, as the âglueâ that holds coral reefs together â
coralline algae â appear to be vulnerable to rising acidity,â Professor
McCulloch explains.
Also of concern is that a large class of plankton, floating in the open
oceans and forming a vital component of marine food webs, appears
equally vulnerable to acidification. If so, this could be serious not
only for marine life that feeds on them â but also for humans, as it
could impair the oceansâ ability to soak up increased volumes of CO2
from the atmosphere. This would cause global warming to accelerate.
Ironically, an added plus is that warming oceans may increase the rates
of coral growth, especially in corals now living in cooler waters, he
says.
However, the big unknown remaining is whether corals can adapt to global
warming, which is now occurring at an unprecedented rate â at about two
orders of magnitude faster than occurred with the ending of the last
Ice Age.
âThis is crucial since, if corals are bleached by the sudden arrival of
hot ocean water and lose the symbiotic algae which are their main source
of energy, they will still die,â he cautions.
âItâs a more complicated picture, but broadly it means that there are
going to be winners and losers in the oceans as its chemistry is
modified by human activities â this could have the effect of altering
major ocean ecosystems on which both we and a large part of marine life
depend.â
The researchers conclude âAlthough our results indicate that
up-regulation of pH at the site of calcification provides corals with
enhanced resilience to the effects of ocean acidification, the overall
health of coral reef systems is still largely dependent on the
compounding effects of increasing thermal stress from global warming and
local environmental impacts, such as terrestrial runoff, pollution and
overfishing.â
Their paper âCoral resilience to ocean acidification and global warming
through pH up-regulationâ by Malcolm McCulloch, Jim Falter, Julie
Trotter, and Paolo Montagna, appears in the latest issue of the journal Nature Climate Change.
|
Latest Book Reviews
- They Sang Like Kangaroos: Australiaâs Tinpot Navy In The Great War
- Great British Shipwrecks: A Personal Adventure
- Global Marine Trends 2030
- Ferries 2011: British Isles and Northern Europe
- Admiral Nimitz: The Commander of the Pacific Ocean Theater
- A Plain Sailorman In China: The Life and Time of Cdr. I.V. Gillis, USN 1875-1948
- Double Cross: The True Story of the D-Day Spies
Latest Comments
Patricia Brooks: How very true. We are deep sea pilots here in Northern Europe offering a service endorsed and licen...geoff.collet:
Pleased to see that sound science is getting a hearing. Over the past 30 years or so, inc...
Chaithra: A recent Boat/US Magazine atclrie reported that 70% of boat sales were sales of used boats. It's no ...
Dermot bremner: Every system has its day, they have their day and cease to be .
Alfred Lord Tennyson






