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As ocean surfaces acidify, a deep-sea acidic zone is expanding, and marine habitats are being squeezed

As ocean surfaces acidify, a deep-sea acidic zone is expanding: marine habitats are being squeezed
The carbonate content of seafloor sediments decreases within the lysocline, reaching zero below the carbonate compensation depth (CCD). Above the lysocline is the calcite saturation depth (CSD), with seabed sediments rich in calcium carbonate. Credit: ,

In the deepest parts of the ocean, below 4,000 meters, the combination of high pressure and low temperature creates conditions that dissolve calcium carbonate, the material marine animals use to make their shells.

This zone is known as the —and it is expanding.

This contrasts with the widely discussed due to the ocean absorbing from the burning of fossil fuels.

But the two are linked: because of rising concentrations of carbon dioxide in the ocean, its pH is decreasing (becoming more acidic), and the deep-sea area in which calcium carbonate dissolves is growing, from the seafloor up.

The transition zone within which calcium carbonate increasingly becomes chemically unstable and begins to dissolve is called the lysocline. Because the ocean seabed is relatively flat, even a rise of the lysocline by a few meters can rapidly lead to large under-saturated (acidic) areas.

Our showed this zone has already risen by nearly 100 meters since pre-industrial times and will likely rise further by several hundreds of meters this century.

Millions of square kilometers of ocean floor will potentially undergo a rapid transition whereby calcareous sediment will become chemically unstable and dissolve.

Expanding boundaries

The upper limit of the lysocline is known as the saturation depth, above which seabed sediments are rich in and ocean water is supersaturated with it. The calcite compensation depth is its lower limit, below which seabed sediments contain little or no carbonate minerals.

The area below the calcite compensation depth varies greatly between different sectors of the oceans. It already occupies about 41% of the global ocean. Since the , this zone has risen for all parts of the ocean, varying from almost no rise in the western Indian Ocean to in the northwest Atlantic.

As ocean surfaces acidify, a deep-sea acidic zone is expanding: marine habitats are being squeezed
These maps show the changes in area of ocean exposed to corrosive bottom waters in 17 different regions. The pre-industrial CCD is dark blue and areas above the lysocline are light blue. Map A shows the present day and map B shows a lysocline rise of 300 metres. Credit: ,

If the calcite compensation depth rises by a further 300 meters, the area of seafloor below it will increase by 10% to .

Distinct habitats

For the first time, a showed the calcite compensation depth is a biological boundary with distinct habitats above and below it. In the northeast Pacific, the most abundant seabed organisms above the calcite compensation depth are soft corals, brittle stars, mussels, sea snails, chitons and bryozoans, all of which have calcified shells or skeletons.

However, below the calcite compensation depth, , sea cucumbers and octopus are more abundant. This under-saturated (more acidic) habitat already limits life in 141 million square kilometers of the ocean and could expand by another 35 million square kilometers if the calcite compensation depth were to rise by 300 meters.

In addition to the expansion of the calcite compensation depth, parts of the ocean in low latitudes are and , both also due to climate change.

Thus, the most liveable habitat space for is shrinking from the bottom (rising calcite compensation depth) and the top (warming).

Island nations most affected

The of some countries will be more affected than others. Generally, oceanic and lose more, while countries with large continental shelves lose proportionately less.

Bermuda's EEZ is predicted to be the most affected by a 300-meter rise of the calcite compensation depth above the present level, with 68% of that country's seabed becoming submerged below the lysocline. In contrast, only 6% of the US EEZ and 0.39% of the Russian EEZ are predicted to be impacted.

From a global perspective, it is remarkable that already 41% of the deep sea is effectively acidic, that half may be by the end of the century, and that the first study showing its effects of marine life was only published in the past year.

Provided by The Conversation

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