Measuring Ocean Acidification: New Technology for a New Era of Ocean Chemistry

Human additions of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere are creating a cascade of chemical consequences that will eventually extend to the bottom of all the world’s oceans. Among the best-documented seawater effects are a worldwide increase in open-ocean acidity and large-scale declines in calcium carbo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & technology 2014-05, Vol.48 (10), p.5352-5360
1. Verfasser: Byrne, Robert H
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description Human additions of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere are creating a cascade of chemical consequences that will eventually extend to the bottom of all the world’s oceans. Among the best-documented seawater effects are a worldwide increase in open-ocean acidity and large-scale declines in calcium carbonate saturation states. The susceptibility of some young, fast-growing calcareous organisms to adverse impacts highlights the potential for biological and economic consequences. Many important aspects of seawater CO2 chemistry can be only indirectly observed at present, and important but difficult-to-observe changes can include shifts in the speciation and possibly bioavailability of some life-essential elements. Innovation and invention are urgently needed to develop the in situ instrumentation required to document this era of rapid ocean evolution.
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source ACS Publications; MEDLINE
subjects Acidity
Acids - chemistry
Atlantic Ocean
Carbon dioxide
Carbon Dioxide - analysis
Chemistry
Earth, ocean, space
Exact sciences and technology
External geophysics
Geophysics. Techniques, methods, instrumentation and models
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
Inorganic Chemicals - analysis
Marine
Oceanography - methods
Oceans
Pacific Ocean
Physical and chemical properties of sea water
Physics of the oceans
Seawater
Seawater - chemistry
title Measuring Ocean Acidification: New Technology for a New Era of Ocean Chemistry
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