One of the stand out scenes in the movie Dante’s Peak, is the grandmother
jumping from the row boat into the lake – her legs dissolving in the acidic
water as she pulls the boat to shore. This
scene is etched into my mind, so when I first heard about ocean acidification –
this was what came into my mind. Nothing
beats heading down to the beach on a hot sunny day to dip your toes into the
cooling water. Did this new threat mean that one day, that toe being dipped would be
pulled back with a squeal of pain as it was burned by acidic seawater?
Admittedly it seemed fairly far-fetched, so I didn’t pay too
much attention. That was until I went to
a Café Scientifique meeting run by
the local museum. It featured a marine
biologist who had seen shellfish stocks completely decimated on the west coast
of America due to ocean acidification, and who was now in New Zealand trying to
prevent the same thing happening to our mussel farms. He talked about the small decrease in pH that was caused by the increased carbon dioxide levels, and the big
impact this had to anything with a calcium structure in the ocean – including my
favourite takeaways!
Now I was concerned… but I was also pretty confused. How did the increase in carbon dioxide in the
air make our oceans more acidic? How was
a decrease of only 0.1 pH unit since the early 1800s (American Chemical
Society, 2012), considered so worrying?
The answers came later that year while studying environmental chemistry
– at last I had my a-ha moment – and my uh-oh.
The oceans absorb around 22 million tonnes of carbon dioxide
each day – about a quarter of what is released by the burning of fossil fuels (Ocean
Portal Team, 2015). When the carbon
dioxide in the air dissolves into the oceans, it combines with water molecules to
produce carbonic acid (H2CO3), then disassociates into
hydrogen ions and bicarbonate (HCO3-). This increase in hydrogen ions is what lowers
the pH (potential hydrogen) value.
Creation of Carbonic
Acid
CO2 + H2O
→ H2CO3
Disassociation of
Carbonic Acid
H2CO3
→ H+ + HCO3-
The oceans natural buffering system attempts to neutralise
the excess hydrogen ions by pulling carbonate away from the calcium carbonate in shells and coral, and forming more bicarbonate.
Disassociation of
Calcium Carbonate
CaCO3 → Ca2+
+ CO32-
Creation of
Bicarbonate
H+ + CO32-
→ HCO3-
This is what is causing the deterioration in the coral
reefs, and the reduction in shellfish numbers.
It also has the potential to reduce populations of any other plant or
animal species that requires calcium carbonate for their development,
particularly in the early formation stages. The risk to fish who have calcium
based skeletons could be potentially devastating to the world’s fisheries.
So while we may not ever reach the point of not being able
to dip our toe into the water, and feel that cooling sensation, we do need to
be concerned that the fish in our fish ‘n’ chips, or our fresh mussels that we
tuck into on the beach after our swim, could well become a thing of the past.
References:
Middlecamp, C.H., Keller, S.W., Anderson, K.L., Bentley,
A.K., Cann, M.C., Ellis, J.P. (2012). Chemistry
in context: applying chemistry to society (7th ed.) New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.
Ocean Portal Team.
(2015). Ocean Acidification. Retrieved from http://ocean.si.edu/ocean-acidification
3 comments:
Great post, it really does raise awareness about ocean acidification, which could be hypothetically described as "climate change's evil twin". If we keep on going the same way, it would be luxurious to say we should be concerned about the future of our seafood- we would be threatened with being covered with water due to rising sea levels! The loss of coral reefs throughout the world (even Antarctica http://www.asoc.org/advocacy/climate-change-and-the-antarctic/ocean-acidification) due to ocean acidification sounds rather awful, especially as it's something we could prevent with some effort.
Oh boy, that makes for a scary read. I keep on wondering how much damage we continue to do to the environment with the use of fuels, and when Governments will start acting, rather than reacting, in order to help stem the tide of destruction to our environments as whole. I think my next method of transport will be a bike.
Facinating and scarey post – made digestible with your writing style which seems to me to be getting better and better.
Post a Comment