Posts 71-80 of 513

Formula for Dangerous Waves

By: shannond | April 9th, 2009 at 10:30am
Text by Newcastle University, Image by NOAA


A new mathematical formula that could be used to give advance warning of where a tsunami is likely to hit and how destructive it will be has been worked out by scientists at Newcastle University.

The research, led by Newcastle University's Professor Robin Johnson, was prompted by the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami disaster which devastated coastal communities in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India and Thailand.

In this instance, an earthquake in the depths of the ocean triggered a long surface wave which resulted in six massive wave fronts, one after the other.

Of these waves it was the third and largest one that caused the most devastation, hitting the beaches with terrifying speed. Reaching a height of 20m, it is this wave that lifted a train from its tracks as it travelled along the Sri Lankan coastline, killing almost 1,000 people.

Professor Johnson and his colleague Professor Adrian Constantin, based at the University of Vienna, Austria, felt that if we could understand more about how these long water waves behave we could predict where they might hit and how devastating they might be.

Their research is published in the academic journal Fluid Dynamics Research.

"What we found was that the number and height of the tsunami waves hitting the shoreline depends critically on the shape of the initial surface wave in deep water," explained Professor Johnson, Professor of Applied Mathematics at Newcastle University.

"From this it is possible to work out whether a 'trough' or a 'peak' is the leading wave. In the case of a trough then the familiar sight of the tide suddenly going out is the precursor to an approaching tsunami.

"If a peak is the leading wave, there is no warning except a fast-approaching wall of water.

"Potentially this could provide vital information for areas facing an impending disaster."

The primary aim of the work was to present a new theory for very long waves over variable depths, in particular tsunamis.

Until now the behaviour of this type of wave has been explained using soliton theory, but Professor Johnson says he had doubted for many years this could accurately calculate the behaviour of such a large wave.

"The difficulty is that to understand in detail how a tsunami wave moves and behaves you need to know how it started in the deep ocean and we can never know that in any particular case," he said.

"However, it is possible to monitor seismic activity and then to give sufficient warning to vulnerable coastal regions that a tsunami is on its way. Automatic sensors have been in the Pacific Ocean for a number of years and sensors have now been placed in the Indian Ocean."

The research shows that the number of peaks and troughs in the initial disturbance out at sea will dictate the number of wave fronts that will steepen and eventually produce tsunami waves.

Professor Johnson said that by calculating the number of waves that will coalesce or 'join together' as the faster ones catch up the slower ones, it is possible to predict how many and how big and fast the final waves hitting the shoreline will be.

"We have shown that it is possible to use the initial wave pattern to work out how the wave will evolve and, importantly, how it might interact with the complicated motions close inshore to produce the tsunamis that we experience," he explains.

"With a time delay of maybe two or three hours between the initial wave trigger and the tsunami hitting the shore, this could prove vital."



Surf for Life Presents Surf Film Festival

By: wetsanduser1 | April 8th, 2009 at 3:41pm





































































Home About Us Program Events Blogs Contact Us Donate Team Donations











Surf For Life presents -
Surf Film Festival

May 5th, 2009
John Colins Lounge
6 PM - 10 PM
$10 suggested door donation
$10 entry fee per film submission



Surf For Life is excited to announce this event to help support its
inaugural trip this May. We are calling for all local surfers and
cinematographers to submit footage of themselves and freinds surfing that will
be presented and shared with our local surf community at the event.

The
submission window is from April 6th to April 29th. An official entry
application and registration form can be downloaded by clicking here.

The
event promises to bring together local surfers and cinematographers to
share their personal footage and to give props to one another on
snagging some excellent waves. Local footage is preferred and
encouraged, but not mandatory. Submissions will be viewed during the
event and one lucky winner will receive a custom piece of surf art
designed and painted by Surf For Life's own, John Dering.

This
is a happy hour event so there will be drink specials and John Colins
Lounge will donate a portion of those proceeds to help support Surf For
Life's inaugural trip.

So come check out some great local surf footage, give props to your friends and favorite films, and support a great cause!


Make your life easy and donate via paypal - or bring cash/check to the event.
(if you donate via PayPal, please be sure to note that it is for this event)











All rights reserved








BEGIN TRACKING CODE

var FCProAccountId = "3d3dfac7-897e-46a5-98f9-3350b9473104";
var ServerName = "surfforlifeglobal-com.sitereports.officelive.com";




src="http://surfforlifeglobal-com.sitereports.officelive.com/FCPISAPI/ISAPIExtn.dll/i/3d3dfac7-897e-46a5-98f9-3350b9473104/0"
/>
END TRACKING CODE
CXNID=5426436&Code=C2





























Mysterious Glowing Sea Worms

By: shannond | April 5th, 2009 at 3:25pm

Text and Photo by Scripps Institution of Oceanography


Many longtime sailors have been mesmerized by the dazzling displays of green light often seen below the ocean surface in tropical seas. Now researchers at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego have uncovered key clues about the bioluminescent worms that produce the green glow and the biological mechanisms behind their light production.

Marine fireworms use bioluminescence to attract suitors in an undersea mating ritual. Research conducted by Scripps marine biologists Dimitri Deheyn and Michael Latz reveals that the worms also may use the light as a defensive measure. The report, published as the cover story of the current issue of the journal Invertebrate Biology, provides insights into the function of fireworm bioluminescence and moves scientists closer to identifying the molecular basis of the light.

"This is another step toward understanding the biology of the bioluminescence in fireworms, and it also brings us closer to isolating the protein that produces the light," said Deheyn, a scientist in the Marine Biology Research Division at Scripps. "If we understand how it is possible to keep light so stable for such a long time, it would provide opportunities to use that protein or reaction in biomedical, bioengineering and other fields-the same way other proteins have been used."

The fireworms used in the study (Odontosyllis phosphorea) are seafloor-dwelling animals that inhabit tropical and sub-tropical shallow coastal areas. During summer reproductive events known as "swarming," females secrete a luminous green mucus-which often draws the attention of human seafarers-before releasing gametes into the water. The bright glow attracts male fireworms, which also release gametes into the bright green cloud.

The precisely timed bioluminescent displays have been tracked like clockwork in Southern California, the Caribbean and Japan, peaking one to two days before each quarter moon phase, 30 to 40 minutes after sunset and lasting approximately 20 to 30 minutes.

Deheyn and Latz collected hundreds of specimens from San Diego's Mission Bay for their study, allowing them to not only examine live organisms but also produce the fireworms' luminous mucus for the first time in an experimental setting. The achievement provided a unique perspective and framework for examining the biology behind the worm's bioluminescent system.

A central finding described in the Invertebrate Biology paper is that the fireworms' bioluminescent light appears to play a role beyond attracting mates. The researchers found that juveniles produce bioluminescence as flashes, leading to a determination that the light also may serve as a defensive mechanism, intended to distract predators.

Through experiments that included hot and cold testing and oxygen depletion studies, Deheyn and Latz found that the bioluminescence is active in temperatures as low as minus 20 degrees Celsius (minus 4 degrees Fahrenheit). Higher temperatures, however, caused the bioluminescence to decay rapidly. The light also proved resilient in settings of low oxygen levels.

Based on these tests, the researchers believe the chemical process responsible for the bioluminescence may involve a specific light-producing protein-also called a "photoprotein." Further identification and isolation will be pursued in future studies.

"We were inspired by the work of earlier researchers who had studied the chemistry of fireworm bioluminescence, including Osamu Shimomura, one of the winners of the 2008 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his discovery of green fluorescent protein from the jellyfish luminescent system," said Latz. "This new study showed that the fireworm bioluminescence also involves green fluorescence, originating from the oxidation product of the luminescent reaction."


Limited Resources and the Human Predicament

By: shannond | April 5th, 2009 at 3:11pm
Text and Photo by Liz Clark



At some point during the last few years of empty or mannered line-ups and my endless surf blessings, I'd lost the drive to fight this type of crowd. It ruins surfing for me. Here we were in this drop-dead gorgeous place where dreams linger on after you open your eyes...where the giving spirit of the Polynesians will humble the wealthiest...here in this blessed paradise, these guys had to drag their ugly greed and selfishness. I was disgusted; downright ashamed and at every one of their despicable beings. Had it been any other circumstance, I would never have subjected myself to such ridiculousness (not true...I paddled out at Rincon more than once when I was in Cali), but anyway, at this point it wasn't really an option. We had limited time. Not enough to make another passage. I wasn't asking for ALL the waves-just one or two, here and there!? Poor Bali tred water on the inside with a look of helplessness, equally horrified at the circus he was beholding.




This went on session after session for three days. We tried every strategy to avoid them. Before sun up, in the heat of midday, and whenever the pack seemed thinnest. Little by little we began to accumulate a few good shots, but the negative energy of the situation was crippling. Part of the problem was that most of them weren't good surfers. There was no sense of peace in any of them. It was as if they were scrambling to catch every wave like THIS one might miraculously eject them into surfing 'coolness'. They certainly didn't look they were having fun!? I would paddle out excited because the waves were GOOD, say hello to every one of them despite it all, but slowly they would suck the joy from me and when I finally caught a wave I was as pissed off and demented as they were...It was a perfect example of limited resources and the predicament of human greed that's destroying the earth! When did 'Aloha' go out of style?




In the lowest moments of frustration, I'd take a deep breath...and gaze back at the mountain ridge. Throughout the day, the various pikes and steeples receded into shadows or glowed anew as the sun rays deepened into the dynamic masterpiece's knobs and recesses. I don't think even one of them noticed.



Liz Clark sails solo around the world on her 40-foot sailboat, Swell, in search of people, places and waves. She sends us travel updates, stories and photos several times a week.

More travel logs

More photos of the trip












"The Test Never Ends" - Bali Strickland

By: shannond | April 5th, 2009 at 3:03pm
Text and Photo by Liz Clark



Bali Strickland arrived from Oz smiling and in full form, ready for anything Swell and I could throw at him. As chance would have it the surf was up, the anchorage was a sandy 25 feet, and the sun was shining between puffy white clouds that burst with rainbows over the stunning black-green backdrop of the island's towering crater peaks. On our first afternoon, despite a royal flogging right out of the starting gates, I caught a few solid bombs and we already felt like the surf footage was in the bag. The swell was supposed to stick around all week and the wind forecast looked mellow. But before we went praising our destination choice, life quickly reminded us that "the test never ends," as Bali perfectly put it. It could never be THAT easy, even on the third round with a filmer!




The next day the swell dropped a bit, and it turned out that not just Bali and I seemed to think this was precisely the right place in the world to be. I'd been here before and hadn't had any problem with the crowd, but the next morning boats and boys and boards seemed to materialize out of the misty morning air! There was a solid, seething pack of them before I could even get my sunscreen on!? Try I did to get waves that day, but they were absolutely RUTHLESS! An especially charming young crew from Hawaii had coincidentally descended upon the quiet little village for a week. The locals claimed they'd NEVER seen it that crowded. The line-up was chaos. There was absolutely no concept of a rotation. They wanted the big ones AND the little ones. The deep ones AND the wide ones. I tried everywhere. They paddled even if they KNEW they were too deep and wasted the wave, staunch-stancing through the inside just behind the section the whole ride, then paddling past me again with soulless, empty eyes after catching a wave for the fifth time right in front of me. And just when I thought there was an empty one, I'd scramble to turn around and see the whitewash give birth to a zinc-plastered body-boarder.




Liz Clark sails solo around the world on her 40-foot sailboat, Swell, in search of people, places and waves. She sends us travel updates, stories and photos several times a week.

More travel logs

More photos of the trip












Sailboat or Submarine?

By: shannond | April 3rd, 2009 at 8:46am
Text and Photo by Liz Clark



The passage got worse before it got better. The wind went into fitful gusts then died completely and shifted 180 degrees about 25 miles out. We then entered a wall of water--one of the thickest downpours I have ever witnessed. It was a rain was so heavy I couldn't see 100 feet in any direction. Wholly unamused, I pressed on without another option, feeling more like I was captaining a submarine than a sailboat. The winds came and went and pirouetted, but the rain held steady. The dim gray of the afternoon eventually faded into darkness and I feared the onset of the night's explosive electric display.




"SURELY there will be lightning," I thought preparing myself for the worst, "no doubt about it..."




But by 9 p.m. the rains seemed to be clearing. There was lightning, but it was the 'nice' kind--the kind that stayed high in the clouds and lit up their fluffy tops. And this kind came without thunder. It merely widens my eyes a bit rather than palpitating my heart. Until the moon rose behind the clouds, the night was as thick as the rain had been. I crawled up from the cabin floor every 15 minutes to check the horizon. We crossed a cargo ship at midnight and another just after 3 a.m. By the time the eastern horizon glowed crimson, Swell and I both seemed to have found a better groove. Maybe I was just deliriously sleep-deprived, but I felt much livelier. I even had the fishing lines out before the sun came up. A morning breeze blew from the north and I turned off the engine. Swell lurched quietly into the new day.



Liz Clark sails solo around the world on her 40-foot sailboat, Swell, in search of people, places and waves. She sends us travel updates, stories and photos several times a week.

More travel logs

More photos of the trip












Watching 'Prawnography'

By: shannond | March 29th, 2009 at 2:21pm
Text and Photo by Queensland University of Technology



A researcher has studied hours of prawn "sex tapes" to find out why prawns bred in captivity did not go on to breed well.

Life sciences researcher Gay Marsden, from Queensland University of Technology, spent two months filming what prawns got up to when the sun went down.

"The Australian prawn aquaculture industry depends on black tiger prawns, Penaeus monodon," Ms Marsden said.

"Currently the broodstock that supply the larvae to stock the ponds are captured from the wild. Wild-caught prawns spawned millions of eggs, which meant that not many needed to be caught for commercial production, but there was a high risk of disease. Viruses can be introduced by wild broodstock, and in high density ponds, crops can be wiped out in days."

Ms Marsden said it is therefore preferable to use captive-bred prawns as broodstock as they can be kept free from the troublesome viruses.

"When prawns are caught from the wild and put into tanks, they have no problem breeding," she said. "It is a different story for the prawns reared in captivity. It was suspected that prawns bred in captivity weren't interested in sex but very little was known about why this was the case, so I undertook the study to try to find out."

Using infrared cameras, Ms Marsden compared the bedroom behaviour of captive-bred prawns with wild prawns and observed combinations of captive-bred prawns mating with wild prawns.

"Males mate with females after the females moult, when they have lost their shells their bodies are soft and can be implanted with sperm," she said.

"But when I looked at the videos of the captive-reared prawns, when the females moulted, the males weren't interested, indicating pheromones were lacking. Their non-reproductive behaviour is normal, so they appear healthy in that regard, but there is a problem, the male and females are not attracted to each other. I found it was partly the females fault probably for not releasing many pheromones, but there was also something wrong with the males, they weren't very receptive to what pheromones there were."

Ms Marsden said that for an animal that had a brain the size of a pin head, prawns were surprisingly complex.

"From my research, we've got leads for improved nutrition and have also carried out some trials looking at the effect of different hormones on the prawn reproduction," she said. "Their endocrine system is not functioning normally and further research is needed to find out why that is."

Ms Marsden's research supervisor was Dr Neil Richardson from the School of Life Sciences.

She said while prawns were best eaten at smaller sizes, the black tiger prawn broodstock grew to about 23 centimeters long and could be found off the Australian east coast and in South East Asia.





A 500-million-year-old Monster Predator

By: shannond | March 29th, 2009 at 2:01pm

Text by Uppsala University, Illustration by Marianne Collins



Hurdia victoria was originally described in 1912 as a crustacean-like animal. Now, researchers from Uppsala University and colleagues reveal it to be just one part of a complex and remarkable new animal that has an important story to tell about the origin of the largest group of living animals, the arthropods.

The fossil fragments puzzled together come from the famous 505 million year old Burgess Shale, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in British Columbia, Canada. Uppsala researchers Allison Daley and Graham Budd at the Department of Earth Sciences, together with colleagues in Canada and Britain, describe the convoluted history and unique body construction of the newly-reconstructed Hurdia victoria, which would have been a formidable predator in its time.

Although the first fragments were described nearly one hundred years ago, they were assumed to be part of a crustacean-like animal. It was not then realised that other parts of the animal were also in collections, but had been described independently as jellyfish, sea cucumbers and other arthropods. However, collecting expeditions from in the 1990s uncovered more complete specimens and hundreds of isolated pieces that led to the first hints that Hurdia was more than it seemed. The last piece of the puzzle was found when the best-preserved specimen turned up in the old collections at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, Washington DC. This specimen was first classified as an arthropod in the 1970s and 80s, and then as an unusual specimen of the famous monster predator Anomalocaris.

The new description of Hurdia shows that it is indeed related to Anomalocaris. Like Anomalocaris, Hurdia had a segmented body with a head bearing a pair of spinous claws and a circular jaw structure with many teeth. But it differs from Anomalocaris by the possession of a huge three-part carapace that projects out from the front of the animal's head.

"This structure is unlike anything seen in other fossil or living arthropods," says Ph.D. student Allison Daley, who has been studying the fossils for three years as part of her doctoral thesis.

"The use of the large carapace extending from the front of its head is a mystery. In many animals, a shell or carapace is used to protect the soft-parts of the body, as you would see in a crab or lobster, but this structure in Hurdia is empty and does not cover or protect the rest of the body. We can only guess at what its function might have been."

Hurdia and Anomalocaris are both early offshoots of the evolutionary lineage that led to the arthropods, the large modern group that contains the insects, crustaceans, spiders, millipedes and centipedes. They reveal details of the origins of important features that define the modern arthropods such as their head structures and limbs. As well as its bizarre frontal carapace, Hurdia reveals exquisite details of the gills associated with the body, some of the best preserved in the fossil record.

"Most of the body is covered in the gills, which were probably necessary to provide oxygen to such a large, actively swimming animal," says Allison Daley.



Fins, Gills and Limbs

By: shannond | March 24th, 2009 at 6:55pm
Text and Image by University of Chicago Medical Center



The shark arch gill skeleton (left) shows primitive gill rays that are found only
in sharks and other cartilaginous fishes. The gills of other fishes (right) are also
arched but lack gill rays.



The genetic toolkit that animals use to build fins and limbs is the same genetic toolkit that controls the development of part of the gill skeleton in sharks, according to a new study.

The research is published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on March 23, 2009, by Andrew Gillis and Neil Shubin of the University of Chicago, and Randall Dahn of Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratory.

"In fact, the skeleton of any appendage off the body of an animal is probably patterned by the developmental genetic program that we have traced back to formation of gills in sharks," said Andrew Gillis, lead author of the paper and a graduate student in the Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy at the University of Chicago. "We have pushed back the evolutionary origin of the developmental genetic program that patterns fins and limbs."

This new finding is consistent with an old theory, often discounted in science textbooks, that fins and (later) limbs evolved from the gills of an extinct vertebrate, Gillis added. "A dearth of fossils prevents us from definitely concluding that fins evolved from gills. Nevertheless, this research shows that the genetic architecture of gills, fins and limbs is the same."

The research builds on the breakthrough discovery of the fossil Tiktaalik, a "fish with legs," by Neil Shubin and his colleagues in 2006. "This is another example of how evolution uses common developmental programs to pattern different anatomical structures," said Shubin, who is the senior author on the PNAS paper and Professor and Associate Dean of Organismal and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Chicago. "In this case, shared developmental mechanisms pattern the skeletons of vertebrate gill arches and paired fins."

The research also showed for the first time that the gill arch skeleton of embryonic skates (a living relative of sharks that has gill rays) responds to treatment with the vitamin A derivative retinoic acid in the same way a limb or fin skeleton does: by making a mirror image duplicate of the structure as the embryo develops. According to the researchers, the genetic circuitry that patterns paired appendages (arms, legs and fins) has a deep evolutionary origin that actually predates the origin of paired appendages themselves.

"These findings suggest that when paired appendages appeared, the mechanism used to pattern the skeleton was co-opted from the gills," Gillis said. "Perhaps we should think of shark gills as another type of vertebrate appendage--one that's patterned in essentially the same way as fins and limbs."

The deep structural, functional, and regulatory similarities between paired appendages and developing gill rays, as well as the antiquity of gills relative to paired appendages, suggest that the signaling network that is induced by retinoic acid had a patterning function in gills before the origin of vertebrate appendages, the research concludes. And this function has been retained in the gill rays of living cartilaginous fishes.
























Carbonated Seas

By: shannond | March 22nd, 2009 at 4:33pm
Text and Image by UC San Diego



Like a sinkful of hard water deposits suddenly doused with vinegar, the shells of tiny marine snails in Victoria Fabry's test tanks don't stand a chance.

Fabry, a biological oceanographer and visiting researcher at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego, studies the effects of ocean acidification on the molluscs known as pteropods. In one experiment, only 48 hours of exposure to slightly corrosive seawater caused normally smooth shells to become frayed at the edges on their way to eventual dissolution, severely diminishing their owners' chances of survival.

The acidity of the water in Fabry's lab had been ratcheted up to levels that might not be seen until the end of the century, but she and other scientists fear that ongoing acidification of ocean water could be causing a slow-motion destruction of ocean ecosystems now.

The loading of carbon dioxide into oceans is a consequence of fossil fuel use that has only begun to be widely recognized as problematic in the past decade. Its subsequent effects on seawater chemistry have the potential to spread ecological disaster to a variety of industries dependent on the seas.

To understand what the world might expect, several Scripps research teams are drawing on the institution's expertise in long-term climate data collection and on new technologies that will help them understand when, where, and how ocean chemistry changes when the seas are overwhelmed by increasing infusions of carbon dioxide. They are joining a growing number of international scientists who are turning their attention to the issue. Their collective hope is to understand whether the oceans are approaching a tipping point of widespread damage and to see what can be done to prevent it.

"We know the oceans are getting more acidic. We know lab experiments have shown that organisms find living more difficult as the CO2 increases," said Scripps marine chemist Andrew Dickson, who is collaborating with Fabry to build a network of observing stations off the California coast. "Studies that can clarify how important this is for ecosystems remain to be designed and done."

As humans burn oil and coal, carbon dioxide is released and accumulates in the atmosphere. A little less than half of it stays in the sky and about a third enters the oceans, dissolving into seawater at the ocean surface.

When ocean water absorbs CO2, the two react to form carbonic acid. The acid reacts with carbonate ions, making the ions less available in ocean waters to shell-forming organisms. Robbed of sufficient quantities of a main ingredient for their shells, these organisms may become less hardy and less able to replenish their numbers.

The trend scientists are seeing might seem small. The average pH of water at the ocean's surface has fallen from 8.16 to 8.05 since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution and the advent of fossil fuel use. Pure water in comparison has a pH of 7.

But marine organisms that build shells have grown accustomed to a certain chemical background and they do not take such a decrease well -- especially at the pace scientists are documenting. The rate of change that marine creatures have endured in fewer than three centuries is 100 times faster than the rate of change over the preceding 850,000 years. And once the lower pH water is present, it will be there for a long time because of the slow pace of ocean circulation. Dickson likens it to pouring cream in a cup of coffee and stirring it once every 1,000 years.

As a relatively well-studied example of acidification's effects, the pteropod has become what ocean acidification researchers consider their canary in the coal mine. The snails, however, are not the only organisms that are sensitive. Nearly all marine life forms that build calcium carbonate shells are jeopardized by the rising acidity of the oceans. That long list includes corals as well as commercially important marine invertebrates such as abalone, sea urchins, clams, and mussels.

Even fishes might be susceptible to problems as carbonic acid amasses in their tissues. A new study led by Australia's James Cook University found that acidification diminishes the ability of larval clownfish, the colorful species popularized in the film "Finding Nemo," to use the olfactory cues they need to locate suitable habitats.

And though they are not themselves harvested as food, pteropods and other vulnerable zooplankton and phytoplankton have an indirect but profound value to fisheries, being a key part of the diet of pink salmon, mackerel, and cod.

Scientists are concerned less about a sudden mass die-off of shelled organisms than about a persistent assault on their health that won't relent for centuries. Coral reefs, for instance, may reach the point at which they erode faster than they grow by the mid-21st Century, according to some estimates.

"These organisms are likely to have difficulty in secreting their shells in a fully functional way which could alter their reproductive success and their population abundances," said Mark Ohman, a Scripps biological oceanographer who recently added carbon dioxide measurements to the data he regularly collects through the California Current Ecosystem Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) program led by Scripps.

But at this point, only the chemical basics of acidification are well-understood. New discoveries have the feel of breaking news. Richard Feely and other researchers at NOAA's Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory made headlines in 2008 when they discovered that masses of acidic water were encroaching on the continental shelf off the West Coast to a surprising extent. The onslaught appears to change throughout the year and scientists still do not understand fully how much pH fluctuates seasonally in coastal waters. They also aren't sure how far masses of lower pH water stretch geographically.

Acidification's potential threat to the California Current, which encompassed most of the area studied by Feely, is making the economically vital ocean region a research target zone. Because Scripps is the home of a key repository of long-term data about the current and greenhouse gases, the institution is becoming a center of ocean acidification studies.

Two key monuments to fastidious long-term data gathering reside at Scripps. The California Cooperative Oceanic Fisheries Investigations (CalCOFI) was launched just after World War II after the West Coast sardine fishery collapsed. It provides a continuous record of temperature, plankton abundance, and other key indicators of the state of the ocean. For most of the program's existence, these data have been gathered quarterly. In 1958, Charles David Keeling initiated measurements of atmospheric carbon dioxide levels at a weather station atop Hawaii's Mauna Loa. Monthly averages are plotted to this day on the iconic graph known as the Keeling Curve.

Both time series and their offshoots help characterize trends in ocean acidification that were present before scientists knew to look for them. Ohman notes that records from CalCOFI are providing "six decades of context" in the form of proxy data ranging from temperature to nutrient concentration. This information will help scientists reconstruct the rate of change in the California Current's acidity. Scientists also hope that the record can tell them not only about acidity trends but how climate cycles like El Ni o cause such trends to fluctuate.

The Keeling Curve provides indirect evidence that not all human carbon dioxide emissions remain in the atmosphere and present-day researchers credit that record for prompting scientists to look for signs of acidification in the oceans. Papers about the phenomenon first started appearing in the 1970s and a decade later, Keeling started a similar time-series of seawater carbon dioxide content and alkalinity levels near Bermuda. Subsequent work by Dickson established the reference standards for measurements of carbon dioxide content and alkalinity of ocean water that have helped researchers uniformly measure trends in acidification.

"The Mauna Loa CO2 time series is the most famous example of what impact you get if you collect very long time series," said Uwe Send, a Scripps physical oceanographer collaborating with Ohman, Fabry, and Dickson, "and we are trying to do the same kind of thing in the ocean in important and representative or critical locations."

Last November, Send, Ohman and NOAA researcher Chris Sabine deployed a mooring with carbon dioxide sensors 250 kilometers (155 miles) southwest of Point Conception, Calif. Contributions from those sensors and several others attached to the mooring feed into data collected by the LTER project, a National Science Foundation-supported program building from CalCOFI that aims to answer scientists' questions about the interplays between California Current organisms and their changing ocean environment.

Fabry and Dickson are leading efforts to deploy two more carbon dioxide sensors this year, one in Carlsbad, Calif., and the other off the Northern California city of Trinidad. The latter launch is part of a California Ocean Protection Council-funded project in which Fabry will conduct complementary tests in the lab to understand how varying pH levels affect marine organisms at different stages of development.

The moored sensors off California are a small contribution to much larger efforts on the global scale. Send is co-leading the international OceanSITES program, which is building a network of stations around the world oceans to collect long time series of changes in ocean climate, carbon, and ecosystems, including acidification.

It took 50 years of case-building on the part of scientists before the world began to respond aggressively to the global warming threat resulting from atmospheric CO2 increases. Because the chemical consequences of adding fossil fuel-derived greenhouse gases is indisputable, Fabry and Dickson hope that the wait for prudent actions will be a shorter one when it comes to the seas.

"What we're doing now will have impacts in our lifetime," said Fabry. "We are certainly leaving a legacy to our children and grandchildren and they're going to ask what did we do about it."





















































Contributors

wetsanduser4

Blog Posts: 217

shannond

Blog Posts: 123

wetsanduser1

Blog Posts: 67

shannondybvig

Blog Posts: 50

cvanmeter

Blog Posts: 43

wetsanduser3

Blog Posts: 10

steblay

Blog Posts: 2

waveprowler

Blog Posts: 1