(i) CO2 effect on ocean acidification
Calcite and aragonite are two different forms of calcium carbonate.
Calcite is the mineral form found in planktonic algae shells, amoeboid protists, some corals, echinoderms, and some molluscs (e.g. oysters); it is relatively less soluble. Aragonite is a more soluble form of calcium carbonate; it is found in most corals, most mollusks (small planktonic snails), and some algae species.
(ii) Influence of other factors
Various factors can locally influence the chemical reactions of CO2 with sea water and add to the effects to ocean acidification. For example,
(a) Acid rain: Acid rain can have a pH between 1 and 6 and has impact on surface ocean chemistry. It has major effect on ocean acidification locally and regionally but very small globally.
(b) Eutrophication: Coastal waters are also affected by excess nutrient inputs, mostly nitrogen, from agriculture, fertilizers and sewage. The resulting eutrophication leads to large plankton blooms. When these blooms collapse and sink to the sea bed the subsequent respiration of bacteria decomposing the algae leads to a decrease in sea water oxygen and an increase in CO2 (a decline in pH).
(iii) Effect of ocean acidification
(iv) Mitigation
(v) Saturation horizons
(vi) Ocean acidification and the short and long-term fate of carbon in the system
Surface Coastal regions periodically experience upwelling events where deeper ocean water circulates onto continental shelves and near-shore areas.
This exposes the productive upper ocean ecosystems to colder water containing more nutrients & more CO2.
As ocean acidification makes the upper oversaturated layer of sea water shallower each year, these natural upwelling events will more often cause undersaturated water to well up and flow to the shore.
Coastal marine organisms that form shells are unaccustomed to such events, and periodic exposures to these significantly different conditions may affect these communities.
(vii) Winners and losers
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1. What is ocean acidification? |
2. How does ocean acidification occur? |
3. What are the impacts of ocean acidification? |
4. How does upwelling contribute to ocean acidification? |
5. What can be done to mitigate ocean acidification? |
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