tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:/xml/ocean_acidification1 ocean acidification news from mongabay.com 2013-05-20T20:15:22Z tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/11435 2013-05-15T14:36:00Z 2013-05-20T20:15:22Z Pacific islanders are the 'victims of industrial countries unable to control their carbon dioxide emissions' With islands and atolls scattered across the ocean, the small Pacific island states are among those most exposed to the effects of global warming: increasing acidity and rising sea level, more frequent natural disasters and damage to coral reefs. These micro-states, home to about 10 million people, are already paying for the environmental irresponsibility of the great powers. Jeremy Hance 1.835776 -157.366905 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10983 2013-03-05T23:01:00Z 2013-03-05T23:17:33Z Warnings of global ecological tipping points may be overstated <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay/sabah/150/sabah_2092.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>There's little evidence that the Earth is nearing a global ecological tipping point, according to a new Trends in Ecology and Evolution paper that is bound to be controversial. The authors argue that despite numerous warnings that the Earth is headed toward an ecological tipping point due to environmental stressors, such as habitat loss or climate change, it's unlikely this will occur anytime soon&#8212;at least not on land. The paper comes with a number of caveats, including that a global tipping point could occur in marine ecosystems due to ocean acidification from burning fossil fuels. In addition, regional tipping points, such as the Arctic ice melt or the Amazon rainforest drying out, are still of great concern. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10503 2012-12-03T21:11:00Z 2012-12-03T21:24:23Z Animals dissolving due to carbon emissions <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/12/sem-image-of-pteropod.oceanacidifcation.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Marine snails, also known as sea butterflies, are dissolving in the Southern Seas due to anthropogenic carbon emissions, according to a new study in Nature GeoScience. Scientists have discovered that the snail's shells are being corroded away as pH levels in the ocean drop due to carbon emissions, a phenomenon known as ocean acidification. The snails in question, Limacina helicina antarctica, play a vital role in the food chain, as prey for plankton, fish, birds, and even whales. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10369 2012-11-07T13:43:00Z 2012-11-07T14:08:06Z Threatened Galapagos coral may predict the future of reefs worldwide <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/12/galapagos.expedition.diver.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>The Galapagos Islands have been famous for a century and a half, but even Charles Darwin thought the archipelago’s list of living wonders didn’t include coral reefs. It took until the 1970s before scientists realized the islands did in fact have coral, but in 1983, the year the first major report on Galapagos reef formation was published, they were almost obliterated by El Niño. This summer, a major coral survey found that some of the islands’ coral communities are showing promising signs of recovery. Their struggle to survive may tell us what is in store for the rest of the world, where almost three-quarters of corals are predicted to suffer long-term damage by 2030. Jeremy Hance -0.499872 -90.621643 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10082 2012-09-04T16:47:00Z 2012-09-04T17:04:05Z Coral calcification rates fall 44% on Australia's Great Barrier Reef Calcification rates by reef-building coral communities on Australia's Great Barrier Reef have slowed by nearly half over the past 40 years, a sign that the world's coral reefs are facing a grave range of threats, reports a new study published in the <i>Journal of Geophysical Research - Biogeosciences</i>. Rhett Butler -23.3030 152.0530 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9967 2012-08-06T22:30:00Z 2012-08-06T22:47:30Z Earth's ecosystems still soaking up half of human carbon emissions <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay/maui/150/maui_0938.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Even as humans emit ever more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, Earth's ecosystems are still sequestering about half, according to new research in <i>Nature</i>. The study finds that the planet's oceans, forests, and other vegetation have stepped into overdrive to deal with the influx of carbon emitted from burning fossil fuels, but notes that this doesn't come without a price, including the acidification of the oceans. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9803 2012-07-10T13:41:00Z 2012-07-10T14:07:38Z 2,600 scientists: climate change killing the world's coral reefs <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay/maui/150/maui_0938.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>In an unprecedented show of concern, 2,600 (and rising) of the world's top marine scientists have released a Consensus Statement on Climate Change and Coral Reefs that raises alarm bells about the state of the world's reefs as they are pummeled by rising temperatures and ocean acidification, both caused by greenhouse gas emissions. The statement was released at the 12th International Coral Reef Symposium. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9677 2012-06-14T18:50:00Z 2012-06-18T00:22:43Z World failing to meet promises on the oceans <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/shipjack-tuna-east-pacific-ocean.Alex-Hofford-Greenpeace.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Despite a slew of past pledges and agreements, the world's governments have made little to no progress on improving management and conservation in the oceans, according to a new paper in Science. The paper is released just as the world leaders are descending on Rio de Janeiro for Rio+20, or the UN Summit on Sustainable Development, where one of the most watched issues is expected to be ocean policy, in part because the summit is expected to make little headway on other global environmental issues such as climate change and deforestation. But the new Science paper warns that past pledges on marine conservation have moved too slowly or stagnated entirely. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9406 2012-04-18T16:12:00Z 2012-04-18T16:17:08Z Featured video: Google Earth highlights imperiled coral reefs around the world A new video by Google Earth and the World Resources Institute (WRI) highlights the world's many endangered coral reefs. A part of the WRI's Reefs at Risk program, the video highlights regional and global threats to the oceans' most biodiverse ecosystem. According to the WRI, a stunning 75 percent of the world's reefs are currently threatened. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9200 2012-03-05T13:04:00Z 2012-03-05T13:20:35Z Carbon emissions paving way for mass extinction in oceans Human emissions of carbon dioxide may be acidifying the oceans at a rate not seen in 300 million years, according to new research published in Science. The ground-breaking study, which measures for the first time the rate of current acidification compared with other occurrences going back 300 million years, warns that carbon emissions, unchecked, will likely lead to a mass extinction in the world's oceans. Acidification particularly threatens species dependent on calcium carbonate (a chemical compound that drops as the ocean acidifies) such as coral reefs, marine mollusks, and even some plankton. As these species vanish, thousands of others that depend on them are likely to follow. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/8998 2012-01-24T18:00:00Z 2012-01-25T17:50:55Z Acid oceans: in some regions acidification a 'hundred times greater' than natural variation Emissions of carbon over the last two centuries have raised the acidity of the oceans to the highest levels in 21,000 years and likely beyond, according to a new study in Nature Climate Change. The change threatens a number of marine species, including coral reefs and molluscs. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/8615 2011-10-31T00:05:00Z 2011-11-01T00:45:16Z 11 challenges facing 7 billion super-consumers <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://mongabay.s3.amazonaws.com/madagascar/150/madagascar_5995.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Perhaps the most disconcerting thing about Halloween this year is not the ghouls and goblins taking to the streets, but a baby born somewhere in the world. It's not the baby's or the parent's fault, of course, but this child will become a part of an artificial, but still important, milestone: according to the UN, the Earth's seventh billionth person will be born today. That's seven billion people who require, in the very least, freshwater, food, shelter, medicine, and education. In some parts of the world, they will also have a car, an iPod, a suburban house and yard, pets, computers, a lawn-mower, a microwave, and perhaps a swimming pool. Though rarely addressed directly in policy (and more often than not avoided in polite conversations), the issue of overpopulation is central to environmentally sustainability and human welfare. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/8038 2011-06-20T16:26:00Z 2012-12-05T18:38:17Z Ocean prognosis: mass extinction <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay/indonesia/150/sulawesi-bunaken_0084.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Multiple and converging human impacts on the world's oceans are putting marine species at risk of a mass extinction not seen for millions of years, according to a panel of oceanic experts. The bleak assessment finds that the world's oceans are in a significantly worse state than has been widely recognized, although past reports of this nature have hardly been uplifting. The panel, organized by the International Program on the State of the Ocean (IPSO), found that overfishing, pollution, and climate change are synergistically pummeling oceanic ecosystems in ways not seen during human history. Still, the scientists believe that there is time to turn things around if society recognizes the need to change. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/7958 2011-06-02T09:46:00Z 2011-06-02T04:33:38Z Ocean acidification dissolves algae, deafens fish As if being a major contributor to global warming wasn't enough, the increasing amount of carbon dioxide produced through human activity is also acidifying our oceans - and doing so more rapidly than at any other time in more than half a million years. New projections show that at current rates of acidification, clownfish and many species of algae may be unable to survive by 2100. Morgan Erickson-Davis tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/7477 2011-02-23T20:01:00Z 2011-02-23T20:23:05Z Coral crisis: 75% of the world's coral reefs in danger <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://mongabay.com/images/nancy/thumbnails/au104.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Marine scientists have been warning for years that coral reefs, the most biodiverse ecosystems in the ocean, are facing grave peril. But a new comprehensive analysis by the World Resources Institute (WRI) along with twenty-five partners ups the ante, finding that 75% of the world's coral reefs are threatened by local and global impacts, including climate change. An updating of a 1996 report, the new analysis found that threats had increased on 30% of the world's reefs. Clearly conservation efforts during the past decade have failed to save reefs on a large-scale. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/7405 2011-02-07T17:51:00Z 2012-12-02T22:35:33Z The ocean crisis: hope in troubled waters, an interview with Carl Safina <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/lazy.point.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Being compared—by more than one reviewer—to Henry Thoreau and Rachel Carson would make any nature writer's day. But add in effusive reviews that compare one to a jazz musician, Ernest Hemingway, and Charles Darwin, and you have a sense of the praise heaped on Carl Safina for his newest work, The View from Lazy Point: A Natural Year in an Unnatural World. Like Safina's other books, The View from Lazy Point focuses on the beauty, poetry, and crisis of the world's oceans and its hundreds-of-thousands of unique inhabitants. Taking the reader on a journey around the world—the Arctic, Antarctic, and the tropics—Safina always returns home to take in the view, and write about the wildlife of his home, i.e. Lazy Point, on Long Island. While Safina's newest book addresses the many ways in which the ocean is being degraded, depleted, and ultimately imperiled as a living ecosystem (such as overfishing and climate change) it also tweezes out stories of hope by focusing on how single animals survive, and in turn how nature survives in an increasingly human world. However, what makes Safina's work different than most nature writing is his ability to move seamlessly from contemporary practical problems to the age-old philosophical underpinnings that got us here. By doing so, he points a way forward. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/7281 2011-01-11T05:12:00Z 2011-01-13T15:23:24Z Photos: Scientists race to protect world's most endangered corals As corals around the world disappear at alarming rates, scientists are racing to protect the ones they can. At a workshop led by the Zoological Society of London (ZSL), the world's foremost coral experts met in response to a decade of unprecedented reef destruction to identify and develop conservation plans for the ten most critically endangered coral species. Morgan Erickson-Davis tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/7035 2010-11-10T21:45:00Z 2010-11-10T22:00:15Z Beyond gloom: solutions to the global coral reef decline The world's coral reefs are in trouble. Due to a variety of factors—including ocean acidification, warming temperatures from climate change, overfishing, and pollution—coral cover has decline by approximately 125,000 square kilometers in the past 50 or so years. This has caused some marine biologists, like Charlie Veron, Former Chief Scientist of the Australian Institute of Marine Science, to predict that coral reefs will be largely extinguished within a century. This year alone, large-scale coral bleaching events, whereby coral lose their symbiotic protozoa and become prone to disease and mortality, were seen off the coasts of Indonesia, the Philippines, and some Caribbean islands. However a new paper in <i>Trends in Ecology and Evolution</i> attempts to dispel the gloom over coral reefs by pointing to strategies, and even some successes, to save them. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/7022 2010-11-08T20:31:00Z 2010-11-08T21:14:18Z Carbon emissions hurting coral recruitment While research has shown that ocean acidification from rising CO2 levels in the ocean imperils the growth and survival mature coral reefs, a new study has found that it may also negatively impact burgeoning corals, by significantly lowering the success of coral recruitment. A study in <i>the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)</i> has found that coral recruitment could fall by 73% over the next century due to increasing acidification. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/6930 2010-10-20T23:07:00Z 2010-10-20T23:25:29Z World needs to protect 32 million square kilometers of ocean in two years <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://mongabay.com/images/yucatan/thumbnails/web/PICT0008.JPG" align="left"/></td></tr></table>According to goals set in 2002 by the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the World Summit on Sustainable Development, nations must spend the next two years catching-up on creating ocean reserve. Currently, about 1.17 percent of the ocean is under some form of protection, but the 2002 goal was 10 percent by 2012. That means protecting over 32.5 million square kilometers, of the ocean twice the size of Russia. According to a recent report, <i>Global Ocean Protection</i> by the Nature Conservancy, not only is the world failing on its goals to protect a significant portion of the ocean, it's also failing to protect 10 percent of various marine ecosystems. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/6915 2010-10-17T19:11:00Z 2010-10-17T19:13:09Z Majority of Americans confused on climate change basics Most Americans don't understand the basics of climate change, according to a new poll by researchers with Yale. The poll found that over half of Americans deserve an 'F' on basic understanding of climate science and climate change, while only 1% would receive an 'A'. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/6683 2010-08-30T21:10:00Z 2010-08-31T18:36:10Z Coral reef survival depends on the super small, an interview with Forest Rohwer <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/rohwer.thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>If you take a teaspoon and dip it into the ocean what will you have? Some drops of lifeless water? Only a few decades ago this is what scientists would have said, however, the development of increasingly powerful microscopes have shown us a world long unknown, which has vital importance for the survival of one of the world's most threatened and most treasured ecosystems: coral reefs. A single milliliter of water is now known to contain at least a million living microbes, i.e. organisms too small to see without a microscope. After discovering their super-abundant presence, researchers are now beginning to uncover how these incredibly tiny life-forms shape the fate of the world's coral reefs. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/6552 2010-07-28T17:19:00Z 2010-07-28T17:23:10Z Backbone of marine food chain in alarming decline Tiny marine algae, known as phytoplankton, are the backbone of the marine food chain, yet a new study in Nature has found that this backbone is disintegrating. Researchers discovered that since 1950 phytoplankton has declined by approximately 40 percent across the Northern Hemisphere, a decline that corresponds to warming waters due to climate change. Given that phytoplankton feed the oceans' abundance all the way up the food chain—from zooplankton to fish to seabird to sharks to humans—the decline has likely impacted the very structure of the ocean. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/6527 2010-07-22T10:53:00Z 2010-07-22T11:02:55Z Coral reefs doomed by climate change <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://mongabay.com/images/nancy/thumbnails/au104.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>The world's coral reefs are in great danger from dual threats of rising temperatures and ocean acidification, Charlie Veron, Former Chief Scientist of the Australian Institute of Marine Science, told scientists attending the Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation meeting in Sanur, Bali. Tracing the geological history of coral reefs over hundreds of millions of years, Veron said reefs lead a boom-and-bust existence, which appears to be correlated with atmospheric carbon dioxide levels. With CO2 emissions rising sharply from human activities, reefs&#8212;which are home to perhaps a quarter of marine species and provide critical protection for coastlines&#8212;are poised for a 'bust' on a scale unlike anything seen in tens of millions of years. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/6521 2010-07-21T16:26:00Z 2010-11-24T22:53:55Z Amazing reefs: how corals 'hear', an interview with Steve Simpson <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/Damselfish_recruits_on_a_reef.thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>Corals aggregate to form vast reefs, which are home to numerous species and provide vital ecological services such as protecting shorelines. However, coral reefs are one of the most threatened ecosystems in the world due to many factors, such as global warming and ocean acidification. Recent research by Simpson and his team of scientists has shown that corals, rather than drifting aimlessly after being released by their parent colonies and by chance landing back on reefs, instead find their way purposefully to reefs by detecting the sound of snapping shrimps and grunting fish on the reef. However, that discovery also means that the larvae might struggle to find reefs when human noises, like drilling or boats, mask the natural ocean sounds. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/6425 2010-07-05T22:34:00Z 2010-07-06T14:11:58Z In the midst of marine collapse will we save our last ocean? <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/ainley.penguin.thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>Imagine an ocean untouched by oil spills: a sea free of pollution, invasive species, dead zones, and over-exploitation; waters where marine animals exist in natural abundance and play ecological roles undimmed by mankind. Such a place may sound impossible in today's largely depleted oceans, but it exists: only discovered in 1841, the Ross Sea spreads over nearly a million kilometers adjacent to the Antarctic continent. Here killer whales, penguins, sea birds, whales, and giant fish all thrive. However, even with its status as the world's 'last ocean', the Ross Sea has not escaped human impact. Over the last 15 years commercial fisheries have begun to catch one of its most important species in the ecosystem to serve them up on the dinner plates of the wealthy. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/5991 2010-04-22T02:59:00Z 2011-06-16T17:01:55Z World failing on every environmental issue: an op-ed for Earth Day <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/madagascar_8006.thumbnail.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>The biodiversity crisis, the climate crisis, the deforestation crisis: we are living in an age when environmental issues have moved from regional problems to global ones. A generation or two before ours and one might speak of saving the beauty of Northern California; conserving a single species—say the white rhino—from extinction; or preserving an ecological region like the Amazon. That was a different age. Today we speak of preserving world biodiversity, of saving the 'lungs of the planet', of mitigating <i>global</i> climate change. No longer are humans over-reaching in just one region, but we are overreaching the whole planet, stretching ecological systems to a breaking point. While we are aware of the issues that threaten the well-being of life on this planet, including our own, how are we progressing on solutions? Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/5435 2010-01-10T17:14:00Z 2010-01-10T17:27:01Z If protected coral reefs can recover from global warming damage A study in the Caribbean has found that coral reefs can recover from global warming impacts, such as coral bleaching, if protected from fishing. Marine biologists have long been worried that coral reefs affected by climate change may be beyond recovery, however the new study published in <i>PLoS ONE</i> shows that alleviating another threat, overfishing, may allow coral reefs to cope with climate change. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/5429 2010-01-07T20:05:00Z 2010-01-07T20:15:25Z Bottom-dwelling sea animals play surprising role in carbon sequestration Researchers have long known that some marine animals, such as plankton, play big roles in the carbon cycle, but a new study shows that a long-ignored family of marine animals, the bottom-dwelling echinoderms, also do their part in the carbon cycle. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/5290 2009-12-15T00:51:00Z 2010-04-16T21:37:37Z Climate change causing irreversible acidification in world's oceans <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://mongabay.com/images/nancy/thumbnails/au104.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>A new study from the Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity has synthesized over 300 reports on ocean acidification caused by climate change. The report finds that increasing acidification will lead to irreversible damage in the world's oceans, creating a less biodiverse marine environment. Released today the report determines that the threat to marine life by ocean acidification must be considered by policymakers at the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/5289 2009-12-14T20:06:00Z 2009-12-14T20:33:03Z Photos: ten beloved species threatened by global warming <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/clownfish__thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has released a list of ten species that are likely to be among the hardest hit by climate change, including beloved species such as the leatherback sea turtle, the koala, the emperor penguin, the clownfish, and the beluga whale. The timing of the list coincides with the negotiations by world leaders at the UN Climate Change Conference to come up with an international agreement to combat climate change. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/5189 2009-12-01T22:46:00Z 2009-12-03T15:18:31Z Not just the polar bear: ten American species that are feeling the heat from global warming A new report, <i>America’s Hottest Species</i>, highlights a variety of American wildlife that are currently threatened by climate change from a small bird to a coral reef to the world’s largest marine turtle. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/5138 2009-11-18T17:58:00Z 2009-11-18T18:27:50Z Oceans' ability to sequester carbon diminishing A new study—the first of its kind—has completed an annual accounting of the oceans' intake of carbon over the past 250 years, and the news is troubling. According to the study, published in <i>Nature</i>, the oceans' ability to sequester carbon is struggling to keep-up with mankind's ever-growing emissions. Since 2000 researchers estimate that while every year the oceans continue to sequester more anthropogenic carbon emission, the overall proportion of carbon taken in by the oceans is declining. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/5114 2009-11-11T19:44:00Z 2009-11-11T20:39:52Z Declaration calls for more wilderness protected areas to combat global warming <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://i54.photobucket.com/albums/g94/troufs/Atelopus_zetecki-2-2.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Meeting this week in Merida, Mexico, the 9th World Wilderness Congress (WILD9) has released a declaration that calls for increasing wilderness protections in an effort to mitigate climate change. The declaration, which is signed by a number of influential organizations, argues that wilderness areas—both terrestrial and marine—act as carbon sinks, while preserving biodiversity and vital ecosystem services. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/5108 2009-11-10T15:55:00Z 2009-11-10T16:00:13Z Coral reef troubles indicate broader ecological problems Today, many of our planet's natural areas are seriously threatened by human incursion, overexploitation and global warming: Less than a fifth of the world's original forest cover remains in unfragmented tracts, while just one-third of coastal mangroves survive to protect coastlines from storms and erosion. But none of these are declining as rapidly as coral reefs. By revealing what could be in store for other natural systems, reefs resemble the proverbial canary in a coal mine. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/4647 2009-06-17T17:50:00Z 2009-06-17T18:47:19Z New report predicts dire consequences for every U.S. region from global warming <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://i54.photobucket.com/albums/g94/troufs/gb4_111-2.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Government officials and scientists released a 196 page report detailing the impact of global warming on the U.S. yesterday. The study, commissioned in 2007 during the Bush Administration, found that every region of the U.S. faces large-scale consequences due to climate change, including higher temperatures, increased droughts, heavier rainfall, more severe weather, water shortages, rising sea levels, ecosystem stresses, loss of biodiversity, and economic impacts. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/4574 2009-05-25T23:51:00Z 2009-05-26T02:43:09Z Starfish may benefit from global warming Climate change is expected to cause widespread disruptions to ecosystems and their resident species. Some creatures will go extinct, others will expand their ranges and thrive. A new study identifies starfish as one of the likely winners from rising ocean temperatures and carbon dioxide concentrations. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/4369 2009-03-13T22:50:00Z 2009-03-13T22:55:41Z Shells thinning due to ocean acidification By soaking up excess CO2 from the atmosphere oceans are undergoing a rise in acidity which is having ramifications across their ecosystems, most frequently highlighted in the plight of coral reefs around the world. However, a new study in <i>Nature Geoscience</i> shows that the acidification is affecting another type of marine life. Foraminifera, a tiny amoeba-like entity numbering in the billions, have experienced a 30 to 35 percent drop in their shell-weight due to the high acidity of the oceans. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/4361 2009-03-09T18:14:00Z 2009-03-09T18:18:08Z Seven new species of deep sea coral discovered In the depths of the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument, which surrounds ten Hawaiian islands, scientists discovered seven new species of bamboo coral. Supported by the National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the discoveries are even more surprising in that six of the seven species may represent entirely new genus of coral. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/4244 2009-02-02T22:06:00Z 2009-02-02T22:35:43Z Nemo at risk from CO2 emissions? Ocean acidification may hurt baby fish <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/09/0202clown150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Increasing carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere may have an unexpected impact on marine ecosystems: disorienting fish larvae. Research published in this week's issue of the <i>Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences</i> (PNAS) found that ocean acidification disrupts the olfactory sense of clownfish larvae, making it difficult for the fish to find a habitat, which for clownfish is a sea anemone. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/4193 2009-01-19T09:50:00Z 2009-01-19T10:03:56Z Fish may help fight ocean acidification Fish are a major source of calcium carbonate production in marine ecosystems, a finding that has implications for ocean acidification, report scientists writing in the journal <i>Science</i>. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/4164 2009-01-01T22:13:00Z 2009-01-02T02:04:06Z Ocean acidification is killing the Great Barrier Reef <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://mongabay.com/images/nancy/thumbnails/au104.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Since 1990 the growth of coral in Australia's Great Barrier Reef has slowed its lowest rate in at least 400 years as a result of warming waters and ocean acidification, report researchers writing in <i>Science</i>. The finding portends a bleak near-term future for the giant reef ecosystem as well as calcifying marine organisms around the world. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/3 2008-12-15T14:30:39Z 2008-12-16T10:06:00Z Climate change, ocean acidification may doom jumbo squid Ocean acidification &#8212; driven by rising carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere &#8212; may hurt the Humboldt squid, report researchers writing in the journal <i>Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences</i>. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/12 2008-12-11T14:30:39Z 2008-12-16T10:06:02Z Climate change will transform the chemical-makeup of the ocean By studying the ocean&rsquo;s past, scientists have discovered that climate change has a much larger affect on ocean chemistry than expected. The study, published in Science, reveals that 13 million years ago climate change significantly altered the chemical composition of the oceans. Such changes in the ocean&rsquo;s chemical makeup today could have a great impact on marine life, already stressed by overfishing and pollution. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/3498 2008-11-18T14:30:39Z 2008-12-16T10:15:54Z Tropical ocean dead zones could increase 50 percent by 2050 If carbon dioxide levels continue to rise as expected, marine dead zones in the tropics are expected to increase by 50 percent in just over four decades, according to a new study from the Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences in Germany. The expansion of marine dead zones in tropical seas could have devastating impacts on ocean ecosystems and fisheries. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/3512 2008-11-14T14:30:39Z 2008-12-16T10:15:56Z Group may sue EPA under Clean Water Act to address ocean acidification An environmental group plans to sue the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for failing to uphold water standards in the face of ocean acidification. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/3518 2008-11-12T14:30:39Z 2008-12-16T10:15:57Z Stopping ocean acidification would save billions of dollars in revenue A new report from Oceana shows that action taken now to curb ocean acidification would not only preserve the world&#x27;s coral reefs, but also save billions in lost revenue in the fishing and tourism industries. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/3525 2008-11-11T14:30:39Z 2008-12-16T10:15:59Z Effects of ocean acidification will come 30 years earlier than expected The Southern Ocean may be 30 years closer to a tipping point for ocean acidification than previously believed, putting sea life at risk, according to research published in this week's <i>Proceedings of the National Academy of Science</i>. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/3297 2008-09-23T14:30:39Z 2008-12-16T10:15:15Z 'Safe' CO2 level may destroy the fishing industry, wreck reefs An atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration of 450 parts-per-million (ppm) &#8212; a target level deemed safe by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) &#8212; would be devastating to marine ecosystems warn scientists writing in the journal Geophysical Research Letters. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/3219 2008-08-18T14:30:39Z 2008-12-16T10:14:54Z The long-ignored ocean emergency and what can be done to address it <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/08/0818pnas150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>This year has been full of bad news regarding marine ecosystems: one-third of coral species threatened with extinction, dead-zones spread to 415 sites, half of U.S. reefs in fair or bad condition, increase in ocean acidification, tuna and shark populations collapsing, and only four percent of ocean considered pristine. Jeremy Jackson, director of the Scripps Center for Marine Biodiversity and Conservation at the University of California, San Diego, synthesizes such reports and others into a new paper, published in the journal <i>Proceedings of the Naional Academy of Sciences</i>, that boldly lays out the scope of the oceanic emergency and what urgently needs to be done. Rhett Butler