• Climate
    • Climate Change
    • Extreme Weather
    • Mitigation
    • Natural Phenomena
  • Green Living
    • Buildings
    • Farming
    • Food and Drink
    • Holidays
    • Home & Garden
    • Natural Health
    • Personal Journey
    • Shopping
  • Resources
    • Finance
    • Water
      • Fresh Water
      • Oceans
    • Energy
    • Trees
    • Waste
      • Composting
      • Pollution
      • Recycling
      • Reduction
      • Repurpose
      • Reuse
  • Biodiversity
    • Air
    • Water
    • Land
  • Innovation
    • Creativity
    • Design
      • Green Building
    • Science
  • Community
    • Civil Society Work
    • Climate Express
    • Eco Communities
    • Faith communities
    • Gatherings
      • Awards
      • Conferences
      • Expo
    • Green Jobs
    • Vulnerable People
  • Responsibility
    • Calls to Action
    • Business
      • Corporate
      • SME’s
    • Governance
      • Cities & Towns
      • Governments
      • Policy Development
    • Individual
  • Training
    • Books
    • Courses
    • DVD’s & Films
    • Youth
      • Bursaries
      • Challenges
      • Competitions
      • Internships
      • Mentorships
      • Schools

The Green Times

Climate change is the most widespread & complex problem humanity has ever faced! There is no time to waste and we need to turn green talk into profound green action. This is the intention of the GREEN TIMES.

9695-green-times_cop21_paris-agreement
You are here: Home / Articles / Climate / Climate Change / Warming oceans will affect the poorest

Warming oceans will affect the poorest

October 23, 2013 Leave a Comment

By 2100, the world’s oceans will be warmer and more acidic, with less dissolved oxygen and lower yields of fish and shellfish. And that will make life very difficult for up to 870 million of the world’s poorest people who rely on the sea for food, jobs and income.

Camilo Mora of the University of Hawaii and colleagues report in the journal Public Library of Science Biology that greenhouse gas emissions from industry and power generation have begun to trigger biogeochemical changes in the oceans that will impose huge costs.

These changes are likely to cascade through marine ecosystems and habitats to the deep ocean itself, and to affect humans along the way.

Everything affected by ocean changes

“The consequence of these co-occurring changes are massive – everything from species survival, to abundance, to range size, to body size, to species richness, to ecosystem functioning are affected by changes in ocean biogeochemistry,” said Dr Mora.

Mora and fellow oceanographers made headlines earlier this month by calculating the year in which any location on Earth was likely to experience dramatic and inexorable climate change: the researchers arrived at a mean date of 2047 (give or take six years on either side) for change, with the first impact in West Papua by 2020.

The PLOS Biology paperonce again tries to take a global view of change on the blue planet. The researchers calculated the effect of two scenarios for the future: one in which the world rapidly tries to reduce emissions, and the notorious business-as-usual scenario, which will take carbon dioxide concentrations to the unprecedented level of 900 parts per million by 2100.
No cooling

Then they contemplated the impact on 32 marine habitats and biodiversity hotspots, and then they examined the available data on human dependence on the ocean.

Most of the world’s seas will feel the heat

They found that most of the world’s ocean surface would feel the heat. Only in the polar regions would there be any increase in productivity or in oxygen levels. Nowhere would there be any cooling, and pH levels would trend towards acidification everywhere.

By 2100 global averages for the upper layer of the ocean would increase by between 1.2°C and 2.6°C. Dissolved oxygen concentrations would on average fall by between 2% and 4%, and phytoplankton production would diminish by between 4% and 10%. Phytoplankton are the base of the ocean food chain, so this can only reduce overall yield for between 470 and 870 million people who make a precarious and meagre living from the sea.

“The impact of climate change will be felt from the ocean surface to the sea floor,” said Andrew Sweetman, a co-author, now at the International Research Institute of Stavanger, Norway. “It is truly scary to consider how vast these impacts will be. This is one legacy that we as humans should not be allowed to ignore.”

By Tim Radford. Source: Climate News Network

More that you may like:

South Africa's green industries plan
The Antarctic Legacy Project
Australian tuna giant cans destructive fishing
Ban Ki-moon: world leaders distracted by politics and oil, while climate change threatens whole of h...

Share this:

  • Google
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • More
  • Email
  • Print
  • Pinterest
tgt_bottom_banner_border_two_frames

Leave a Reply or Follow Cancel reply

tgt_top
Welcome to SA\s green news portal
JOIN OUR MONTHLY NEWSFEED
Like our work? Please help Subscribe-now
  • ECO DIRECTORY
    • Accommodation
    • Animals
    • Building
    • Cleaning
    • Clothing
    • Cosmetics
    • Electronics
    • Energy
      • Saving
      • Solar
    • Financial Services
    • Food/Farming
    • Gardening
    • Government
    • Health
    • Office
    • Publications
    • Restaurants
    • Supermarkets
    • Training
    • Transport
    • Trees
    • Waste
      • Composting
      • Recycling
    • Water
    • Web Services

Topics

Africa agriculture animals awards Cape Town carbon emissions children climate change community conference conservation drought economy education energy Eskom extreme weather farming food fracking global warming government Greenpeace health ocean oceans organic petco plastic Plastics Federation of South Africa protect protests Recycling renewable energy research rhino science solar energy South Africa sustainability united nations waste Water wildlife youth

RSS Feed & Email Subscriptions

The Green Times
The Green Times» Biodiversity
The Green Times» Climate
The Green Times» Community
The Green Times» Governance
The Green Times» Innovation
The Green Times» Mitigation
The Green Times» Resources
The Green Times» Responsibility
The Green Times» Training
The Green Times» Youth
2012-giving-thanks-for-environmental-wins
CONTRIBUTE HERE
Do you like what we do? Would you like to help keep this work afloat with a small monthly contribution? Join as a member and let's do it together.
nedbank-plays-pivotal-role-in-sas-first-green-bond
BECOME A SPONSOR
Doing good is good for business. We rely on corporate CSI and philanthropic support to drive sustainability mainstream, where it belongs.
  • ABOUT GREEN TIMES
    • Our Ethos
    • Our Intention
    • Contributors
  • Support
    • Editorial
    • Sales
    • Contributions
  • Journalist Training
  • Feedback from Our Clients
  • Newsfeed Archive
JOIN OUR SOCIAL NETWORKS
  • 
  • 
  • 
  • 
  • 
JOIN OUR MONTHLY NEWSFEED
Like our work? Please help Subscribe-now

Return to Top of Page · Copyright © 2011–2016 All rights reserved · GREEN TIMES +2721 855 0518 · Design & Admin - ARACHNE DESIGN ·

loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.