Posted on OA: 19 Feb 2014 Changing atmospheric composition due to human activities, primarily carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from fossil fuel burning, is already impacting ocean circulation, biogeochemistry, and ecology, and model projections indicate that observed trends will continue or even accelerate over this century. Elevated atmospheric CO2 alters Earth’s radiative
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Contaminants and Pollution: Ocean Acidification – Part II
Posted on SeaWeb: 19 Feb 2014 — Additional research papers pertaining to OA, including studies conducted by C-CAN collaborators For part 2 of the list of OA research papers compiled by SeaWeb, go to at http://www.seaweb.org/science/MSRnewsletters/MSR_CP_OceanAcidificationPartII_2-2014.php#one
“Oceanography” magazine – special issue on changing ocean chemistry
Posted on OA: 19 Feb 2014 Deployment of the NIOZ-built water sampling system from R/V Pelagia during GEOTRACES cruise 64PE373 in the Mediterranean Sea. The system has 24 × 24 L PVDF pristine samplers mounted on an all-titanium ultraclean CTD frame using a metal-free Kevlar hydrowi A special issue of
Compendium of research on OA — Ocean Acidification part 1
Posted on SeaWeb: 18 Feb 2014 — A series of research papers has been posted on SeaWeb, including research by several C-CAN cooperators View a compendium of recent research papers on OA, including several by cooperating C-CAN scientists, at http://www.seaweb.org/science/MSRnewsletters/MSR_CP_OceanAcidification_2-2014.php#one
Direct impacts of near-future ocean acidification on sea urchins
Posted on OA: 18 Feb 2014 Anthropogenic CO2 emissions are acidifying the world’s oceans. A growing body of evidence demonstrates that this ocean acidification can impact survival, growth, development and physiology in marine invertebrates. A few years ago, a global analysis of the literature revealed that echinoderms were surprisingly robust