MENU

Social Channels

SEARCH ARCHIVE

  • Type

  • Topic

  • Sort

Clown Anemonefish, Australia
© Reinhard Dirscherl/Corbis
OCEAN ACIDIFICATION
23 February 201616:01

Ocean acidification: Decline of Great Barrier Reef likely to be worse than feared

Roz Pidcock

02.23.16

Roz Pidcock

23.02.2016 | 4:01pm
Ocean acidification Ocean acidification: Decline of Great Barrier Reef likely to be worse than feared

Parts of the Great Barrier Reef are more vulnerable to ocean acidification than previously thought, according to new research published today in the journal Nature Communications.

The first-of-a-kindstudyof more than 3,000 coral reefs off the northeast coast of Australia reveals how some parts are already experiencing the kind of conditions scientists were predicting many decades from now.

This means the decline of the iconic ecosystem is likely to be steeper than scientists feared, say the team from theCommonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) in Australia and theKing Abdullah Universityof Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia.

Building blocks

Since humans began industrialising, the oceans have absorbedabout 30%of the extra carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere. This is changing the chemistry of the seawater.

With a pH of around 8, seawater is naturally alkaline. But, as the oceans absorb CO2, it turns to carbonic acid. This doesn’t immediately make the oceans acidic, but it is causing them to become gradually less alkaline. Since the direction of change is towards the acid end of the scale, the process is known as ocean acidification.

Scientists estimate the ocean’s pH has dropped about0.1 unitssince the start of the industrial revolution, from about 8.2 to 8.1.That might not sound like a lot, but the effects are already being felt in coral reefs around the world.

As more CO2dissolves in the seawater, it becomes harder for corals and other organisms to build the hard structures that protect them. As long as seawater is saturated with a form of calcium carbonate known as aragonite, corals can grow their skeletons. But if levels drop too low, the skeletons begin to dissolve faster than they can be built.

The consequences of ocean acidification have been known for a while. A 2005studyfound the shells ofsea snails began to dissolve when they were exposed to seawater with low levels of aragonite.A 2009study发现69年珊瑚礁构造珊瑚礁智慧的程度hin the Great Barrier Reef complex had declined by 14% since 1990. Another paperestimatescoral cover across the Great Barrier Reef is as low as 20-30%, a significant drop compared to the 1960s.

A new study justpublishedin Nature shows how much ocean acidification is holding back coral growth in the southern part of the Great Barrier Reef. Corals in the One Tree Reef began building their skeletons faster oncethe scientistsartificially restored the pH of the seawater to preindustrial levels over a period of 15 days.Dr Janice Loughfrom the Australian Institute of Marine Science and the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Reef Studies at James Cook University explains in an accompanying News and Views article:

There are manymore examplesof the world’s coral reef systems under threat. But the new paper is the first to identify theindividualreefs within the Great Barrier Reef – described as one of the seven natural wonders of the world – that are most at risk from acidifying oceans.

Map of living coral on the Great Barrier Reef.

Living coral on the Great Barrier Reef. Red lines show the major oceanic surface currents. (NQC: North Queensland Current; EAC: East Australian current; NCJ: North Caledonia Jet.) Coloured dots are individual reefs, defined by the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority. Source:Mongin et al., (2016)

A new approach

Scientists predict that if CO2emissions stay as high as they are, the pH in the surface oceans could fall a further0.2-0.4 unitsby the end of the century.

为珊瑚礁理解这意味着什么,科学entists next need to know how much aragonite there is in the seawater where the corals are found. It’s a good indication of how resilient corals are likely to be, since those in waters with only just enough aragonite to sustain their skeletons will be the most vulnerable as the oceans acidify further. Where there’s a lot of aragonite in the water, on the other hand, those corals will be the most resilient to change.

But it’s impossible to measure aragonite saturation for every single reef in the Great Barrier ecosystem, today’s paper explains. One way scientists have approached this problem in the past is to use earth system models to simulate how rising CO2is expected to lower aragonite saturation. But these models aren’t fine-scale enough to capture changes in individual reefs.

Instead, the authors of today’s paper employ a completely new approach. They took existing measurements at 22 sites around the inner Great Barrier Reef and combined them with a very fine-scale model of the surrounding water properties. Rather than taking a big picture view like previous studies, this allowed them to focus in on individual reefs for the first time.

Crown of Thorns Starfish, Indonesia

Crown of thorns starfish (Acanthaster planci), 04 Aug 2014, Sumatra, Indonesia. © Michele Westmorland/Corbis.

Healthcheck

The biggest result from the study was that across the 3,581 individual reefs, the authors found a much greater difference in the amount of aragonite in seawater than they were expecting.

The difference between the highest and lowest values was almost 50% bigger than the observations alone suggest, and more than three times bigger than in the conventional models.

This higher-than-expected variation is down to the fact that different processes influencing aragonite saturation dominate to a greater or lesser extent in different parts of the reef, the paper explains. These processes include how the water circulates, the amount of biological activity and how much freshwater is delivered by nearby rivers, among other factors.

The scientists don’t think ocean acidification is the main driver of the differences in aragonite saturation from one part of the reef to another, explainsDr Mathieu Mongin, a coastal modeller at CSIRO and the lead author on the new study. He tells Carbon Brief:

Climate change by the mean of rising CO2is not directly responsible for the current variability in aragonite saturation state. It is natural processes…that drive the variability.

But what the new studydoesshow is that while ocean acidification is gradually driving down coral quality across the whole Great Barrier Reef, not all reefs start with the same bill of health.

In fact, the authors found aragonite saturation in some regions is already as low asscientists expectby the end of the century under a very high emissions scenario. In central parts of the reef, the paper explains, aragonite levels are already so low that coral skeletons are starting to dissolve faster than they’re being built – a situation that the scientists expect to expand north and south with time.

Identifying which areas are the most vulnerable to ocean acidification has “profound implications” for predicting the future of the Great Barrier Reef, explains Mongin.

Great Barrier Reef

The Great Barrier Reef. Credit:Jorge Láscar/Flickr

Now that scientists know the “chemical status” of the entire reef system, he says, it’s clear that the point at which ocean acidification causes corals to switch from building their skeletons to seeing them dissolve is likely to be reached sooner than expected in some places, he says.

Prof Jean-Pierre Gattuso, research professor at theInstitute for Sustainable Development and International Relations (IDDRI), who was not involved in the research, explains why the new study is very significant. He tells Carbon Brief:

Most of the long-term observations and model projections of future ocean acidification are available in the open ocean…Yet, the impacts of ocean acidification will be in the coastal zone which provides enormously valuable ecosystem services such as fisheries, aquaculture, coastal protection and recreation.

Gattuso’sown researchsuggests that even if countries limit global temperature rise to below 2C, as outlined in the recentParis Agreement, some degree of damage looks unavoidable. He tells Carbon Brief:

We have shown that even the full implementation of the Paris Agreement will bear high risk for warm-water corals and coral reefs. Mitigation will not not enough and local managers will need to implement protection and adaptation measures.

Of course, ocean acidification isn’t the only pressure the Great Barrier Reef has to contend with, adds Mongin. Warmer water leading tocoral bleaching, tropical storms, sea level rise, disease,pollution, fishing and invasive species, including thecrown of thorns starfish, all causestress to corals.

This bleak-sounding prognosis doesn’t allow for the possibility that corals could adapt to some extent, perhaps staving off some of the worst effects, says Mongin. But, as today’s paper explains, the signs suggest that even stringent cuts in emissions may now not be enough to avoid losing parts of Great Barrier Reef, and the vital ecosystems the corals support.

Main image: Clown Anemonefish, Amphiprion percula, Osprey Reef, Coral Sea, Australia, 20 Apr 2015.

Mongin, M. et al., (2016) The exposure of the Great Barrier Reef to ocean acidification. Nature Communications.doi: 10.1038/ncomms10732

This article was updated on 21/04/2020 to correct a reference to a "42%" decline in coral building in the Great Barrier Reef. The 2009 study actually identified a 14.2% decline.

Sharelines from this story
  • Ocean acidification: Decline of Great Barrier Reef likely to be worse than feared
  • Parts of the Great Barrier Reef are more vulnerable to ocean acidification than previously thought, says new research

Expert analysis direct to your inbox.

Get a round-up of all the important articles and papers selected by Carbon Brief by email. Find out more about our newslettershere