Where am I? > Home > News > Environment

Small sea creatures may be the 'canaries in the coal mine' of climate change

Science Centric | 17 February 2008 18:00 GMT
Printable version A clip for your blog or website E-mail the story to a friend
Bookmark or share the story on your social network Vote for this article Leave a comment Decrease text size Increase text size

As oceans warm and become more acidic, ocean creatures are undergoing severe stress and entire food webs are at risk, according to scientists at a press briefing this morning at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Boston.

Gretchen Hofmann, associate professor of biology at the University of California, Santa Barbara, has just returned from a research mission to Antarctica where she collected pteropods, tiny marine snails the size of a lentil, that she refers to as the 'potato chip' of the oceans because they are eaten widely by so many species. The National Science Foundation's Office of Polar Programs funded the expedition.

Pteropods are eaten by fish that are in turn consumed by other animals, such as penguins. As these small creatures are stressed by an increasingly acidic ocean, due to the build-up of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, they are less able to cope with a warmer ocean.

'These animals are not charismatic but they are talking to us just as much as penguins or polar bears,' said Hofmann. 'They are harbingers of change. It's possible by 2050 they may not be able to make a shell anymore. If we lose these organisms, the impact on the food chain will be catastrophic.'

Hofmann is a molecular ecologist who studies how genes go off and on as certain marine animals work to make their calcium carbonate shells from the seawater they live in. She characterised her recent trip to Antarctica as an urgent research mission.

She has performed extensive studies of the sea urchin that lives in the kelp forests of California. Sea urchins are a vital part of the food web and play a major economic role in California fisheries, since the roe of the sea urchin is a valuable sushi called 'uni.'

Hofmann explained that as marine invertebrates deal with increasing acidity, the larvae have to 're-tune' their metabolism in order to still make a shell. But this is done at a cost. The physiological changes that are a response to the acidity make the animals less able to withstand warmer waters, and they are smaller.

'These observations suggest that the 'double jeopardy' situation - warming and acidifying seas - will be a complex environment for future marine organisms,' she said.

Hofmann is studying levels of carbon dioxide that would result from what the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) predicts would occur if humanity continues on a 'business as usual' scenario projected out to the year 2100.

Source: University of California - Santa Barbara

A healthy coral reef in Tanzania, (c) Tim McClanahan/WCS'Super reefs' fend off climate change

— 23 April 2009

The Wildlife Conservation Society announced today a study showing that some coral reefs off East Africa are unusually resilient to climate change due to improved fisheries management... — full story

Chaffin Ranch geyser, Utah, during an eruption of CO2 and water, (c) Jason HeathCarbon capture has a sparkling future

— 1 April 2009

New research shows that for millions of years carbon dioxide has been stored safely and naturally in underground water in gas fields saturated with the greenhouse gas. The findings... — full story

Examining an agar dish for bacterial colonies as part of the bioremediation project, (c) David McClenaghan, CSIROBioremediation to keep atrazine from waterways

— 17 February 2009

Farmers around the world are expected to benefit from the successful trial of an enzyme that breaks down the herbicide, atrazine, in run-off water. 'When we added the enzyme to a holding... — full story

Internal heating element from CSIRO designed Climate Testing Rig, (c) CSIROKeeping cool using the summer heat

— 23 January 2009

While most Australians are taking care to shield themselves from the harsh summer heat, scientists from the CSIRO Energy Transformed Flagship are working on ways to harness the sun's... — full story


Popular tags in Environment: climate · ecosystems · nitrogen · pollution