Bering Sea may not remain productive fishery by 2100 due to ocean warming (Re-Issue)
January 14th, 2008 - 1:43 pm ICT by admin - Send to a friend:Washington, Jan 14 (ANI): Ecologists have predicted that the Bering Sea, which is one of the world’s most productive fisheries, would be unsustainable by the year 2100 because of warmer ocean surfaces with increased levels of carbon dioxide.
Experiments done by researchers from University of Southern California (USC) also point towards the fact that the ecosystem in the Bering Sea would change considerably by the next century.
As part of the experiments, the researchers collected the algae samples from the Bering Sea’s central basin and the southeastern continental shelf.
“The experiments we did up there definitely suggest that the changing ecosystem may support less of what we’re harvesting-things like pollock and hake,” said USC marine ecologist Dave Hutchins.
According to Hutchins, while the study must be interpreted cautiously, its implications are harrowing, especially since the Bering Sea is already showing signs of warming.
“It’s warmer, marine mammals and birds are having massive die-offs, there are invasive species-in general, it’s changing to a more temperate ecosystem that’s not going to be as productive,” he said.
The crux of the study was examining how climate change is adversely affecting algal communities of phytoplankton, the heart of marine food webs.
Phytoplankton use sunlight to convert carbon dioxide into carbon-based food. As small fish eat the plankton and bigger fish eat the smaller fish, an entire ecosystem develops, which is the reason why the Bering Sea is highly productive because of the presence of diatoms, a large type of phytoplankton.
But, from the research, the scientists found that greenhouse conditions favored smaller types of phytoplankton over diatoms. Such a shift would ripple up the food chain because as diatoms become scarce, animals that eat diatoms would become scarce, and so forth.
A shift away from diatoms towards smaller phytoplankton could also undermine a key climate regulator called the “biological pump.”
When diatoms die, their heavier carbon-based remains sink to the seafloor. This creates a “pump” whereby diatoms transport carbon from the atmosphere into deep-sea storage, where it remains for at least 1,000 years.
“While smaller species often fix more carbon, they end up re-releasing CO2 in the surface ocean rather than storing it for long periods as the diatom-based community can do,” Hutchins explained.
This scenario could make the ocean less able to soak up atmospheric carbon dioxide.
“Right now, the ocean biology is sort of on our side,” said Hutchins. “About 50 percent of fossil fuel emissions since the industrial revolution is in the ocean, so if we didn’t have the ocean, atmospheric CO2 would be roughly twice what it is now,” he added. (ANI)
Related Stories
- Bering Sea may not remain productive fishery by 2100 due to ocean warming - January 12, 2008
- Ocean is growing more acidic faster than previously thought - November 25, 2008
- Southern Oceans ability to soak up CO2 unaffected by changing winds - December 9, 2008
- Pacific coast is turning more acidic, determines new research - May 23, 2008
- Ocean odor leads reef fish to gather for feeding - March 7, 2008
- Southern Ocean could become too acidic by 2030 - November 11, 2008
- Greater emission cuts needed to prevent irreversible damage - July 3, 2008
- Current cutbacks in CO2 emissions not enough to save coral reefs - September 23, 2008
- First ocean-scale study of deep-sea corals may reveal climate secrets - February 20, 2008
- Increasing carbon dioxide threatening major sea food source - December 11, 2007
- Sea urchins at risk due to global warming - March 2, 2008
- Marine organism bypasses photosynthesis for survival - March 13, 2008
- Marine organism bypasses photosynthesis for survival - March 13, 2008
- ESA tests laser to measure atmospheric CO2 - December 4, 2008
- New theory suggests certain marine microorganisms do not require photosynthesis - March 12, 2008
- algal communities
- central basin
- climate change
- continental shelf
- diatoms
- ecologists
- greenhouse conditions
- hake
- hutchins
- invasive species
- marine ecologist
- marine food webs
- marine mammals
- ocean surfaces
- productive fisheries
- productive fishery
- s central
- small fish
- types of phytoplankton
- university of southern california
Posted in Health Science, |

