Download - Ocean Acidification Victoria J. Fabry and Andrew G. Dickson Scripps Institution of Oceanography and California State University San Marcos [email protected].

Transcript
Page 1: Ocean Acidification Victoria J. Fabry and Andrew G. Dickson Scripps Institution of Oceanography and California State University San Marcos fabry@csusm.edu.

Ocean AcidificationOcean Acidification

Victoria J. Fabry and Andrew G. DicksonScripps Institution of Oceanography

and California State University San Marcos

[email protected]

Page 2: Ocean Acidification Victoria J. Fabry and Andrew G. Dickson Scripps Institution of Oceanography and California State University San Marcos fabry@csusm.edu.

Atmospheric CO2 concentration at Mauna Loa Observatory, Hawaii

Page 3: Ocean Acidification Victoria J. Fabry and Andrew G. Dickson Scripps Institution of Oceanography and California State University San Marcos fabry@csusm.edu.

Atmospheric CO2 concentration at Mauna Loa Observatory, Hawaii

Ocean pH at the Hawaii Ocean

Time-Series Site

Page 4: Ocean Acidification Victoria J. Fabry and Andrew G. Dickson Scripps Institution of Oceanography and California State University San Marcos fabry@csusm.edu.

Effect of adding CO2 to seawater

increase in dissolved CO2

increases bicarbonate

decreases carbonate

hydrogen ion concentration increases

CO2 CO32 H2O Ä 2HCO3

pH = –log [H+] decreases

and the saturation state of calcium carbonate decreases

Page 5: Ocean Acidification Victoria J. Fabry and Andrew G. Dickson Scripps Institution of Oceanography and California State University San Marcos fabry@csusm.edu.

CO2 concentration in the atmosphere

Measured

Page 6: Ocean Acidification Victoria J. Fabry and Andrew G. Dickson Scripps Institution of Oceanography and California State University San Marcos fabry@csusm.edu.

CO2 concentration in the atmosphere

Measured

IPCC scenarioA1FI

Page 7: Ocean Acidification Victoria J. Fabry and Andrew G. Dickson Scripps Institution of Oceanography and California State University San Marcos fabry@csusm.edu.

1765 280 ppm

Aragonite saturation state(from corals’ point of view)

Extremely low Optimal

Page 8: Ocean Acidification Victoria J. Fabry and Andrew G. Dickson Scripps Institution of Oceanography and California State University San Marcos fabry@csusm.edu.

2010 390 ppm

Extremely low Optimal

Aragonite saturation state(from corals’ point of view)

Page 9: Ocean Acidification Victoria J. Fabry and Andrew G. Dickson Scripps Institution of Oceanography and California State University San Marcos fabry@csusm.edu.

2040 495 ppm

Extremely low Optimal

Aragonite saturation state(from corals’ point of view)

Page 10: Ocean Acidification Victoria J. Fabry and Andrew G. Dickson Scripps Institution of Oceanography and California State University San Marcos fabry@csusm.edu.

2080 788 ppm

Extremely low Optimal

Aragonite saturation state(from corals’ point of view)

Page 11: Ocean Acidification Victoria J. Fabry and Andrew G. Dickson Scripps Institution of Oceanography and California State University San Marcos fabry@csusm.edu.

1997 2008

Science, 2009

Page 12: Ocean Acidification Victoria J. Fabry and Andrew G. Dickson Scripps Institution of Oceanography and California State University San Marcos fabry@csusm.edu.
Page 13: Ocean Acidification Victoria J. Fabry and Andrew G. Dickson Scripps Institution of Oceanography and California State University San Marcos fabry@csusm.edu.

Sabine et al. (2004) & Doney (2006)

Distribution of excess CO2 in the oceans