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North Pacific waters are acidifying more rapidly below the surface, research reveals

North Pacific waters are acidifying more rapidly below the surface
Tully Rohrer, Lucie Knor, Fernando Pacheco, Daniel Fitzgerald with the CTD Rosette that collects Hawai'i Ocean Time-series water samples. Credit: Carolina Funkey

Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere enters the ocean at the surface and has been increasing the acidity of Pacific waters since the beginning of the industrial revolution over 200 years ago. A new study, led by University of Hawai'i at M膩noa oceanographers, revealed that the ocean is acidifying even more rapidly below the surface in the open waters of the North Pacific near Hawai'i.

Their discovery is in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans.

"Ocean acidification has far鈥恟eaching consequences for ocean biology and the global climate," said Lucie Knor, lead author of the study and postdoctoral researcher in the UH M膩noa School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST).

"We expected some indicators of to be changing more rapidly below the surface, because that was what some global studies have previously discovered, but we were very surprised that this was true for every single ocean acidification indicator."

Knor and co-authors analyzed a 35鈥恲ear record of ocean carbon measurements made by the Hawai'i Ocean Time-series program throughout the entire 鈥攆rom the surface to nearly three miles deep鈥攁t the open ocean field site 60 miles north of O'ahu, Hawai'i, Station ALOHA.

They found that in all layers, there are increases in carbon from natural decomposition of sinking organisms. In some layers, accelerated acidification is associated with fresher and colder waters.

"Deeper waters are already naturally quite acidic in the North Pacific, so quickly increasing acidity could negatively impact plankton species and other organisms that live below the surface," said Knor. "In the long run, these changes in ocean chemistry also make it harder for the ocean to keep taking up more CO鈧 from the atmosphere."

North Pacific waters are acidifying more rapidly below the surface
Station ALOHA. Credit: Lucie Knor

In the past decade or so, there has been an onslaught of marine heat waves associated with unusual conditions in the ocean and atmosphere and strong, multi鈥恲ear El Ni帽o events.

Researchers, fisheries managers, and coral conservationists are concerned with the combined impacts of marine heat waves and ocean acidity events.

Subsurface waters at station ALOHA are formed farther north in the Pacific. Changes in seawater properties impacted by evolving environmental conditions in other areas of the North Pacific are then transported by into the deeper layers of the ocean around Hawai'i.

"We illustrate that regional-scale changes in source water chemistry and circulation are substantial drivers of the subsurface intensification of ocean around Hawaii," said Christopher Sabine, co-author of the article and Oceanography professor in SOEST.

Currently, the research team is investigating the carbon specifically from human-made sources in the water column at Station ALOHA and how that is changing over time in different layers.

More information: Lucie A. C. M. Knor et al, Drivers and Variability of Intensified Subsurface Ocean Acidification Trends at Station ALOHA, Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans (2025).

Journal information: Journal of Geophysical Research

Citation: North Pacific waters are acidifying more rapidly below the surface, research reveals (2025, August 19) retrieved 3 September 2025 from /news/2025-08-north-pacific-acidifying-rapidly-surface.html
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