Global Warming and
The Acidification of the Oceans.
The authenticity of
global warming is a heated topic with many believing that we can never conclusively
prove that climate change caused by humans or its not happening at all. Skeptics argue that there is no proof or that
the science is not accurate. However the acidification of the oceans disproves their
main arguments. Acidification is a decrease in the pH level of the ocean this
creates complications for many of the creatures living there.
The
acidification of the oceans is a very simple chemical reaction that is natural
and generally without negative consequences in small quantities. However when excessive amounts of carbon
dioxide are in contact with water, they react to create carbonic acid in this
chemical reaction CO2 + H2O รณH2CO3.
The arrow between the reactants and the products (facing the left and right)
means that some of the products will convert back to reactants, so not all of
the water turns to acid. Then the carbonic acid (the product of the reaction) disassociates
into H+ ions (acid) and HCO3- (base). The acid is
neutralized when it reacts with a base, usually carbonate that naturally occurs
in the ocean (CO32-). While the neutralization of the
acid may sound like a good thing, by taking out the carbonate from the
environment, this prevents tiny creatures from using the carbonate to make
their shells. Without the necessary minerals to protect themselves, many of
these organisms die off. Unfortunately this causes a devastating chain reaction,
as these creatures are the base organism for many food chains, meaning many
organisms survive off eating them or eating something that eats them.
One
of the main arguments presented against global warming, is that in the last
twenty to thirty years, the climate has not changed a significant amount.
Carbon dioxide is a heat trapping gas so by that logic, the disbelievers claim it
should heat up the earth more than it has been. However, according to the
experts at National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, half of the carbon dioxide produced by cars
and coal is dissolved in the ocean. This reduces the amount of heating carbon
dioxide released into the atmosphere. This in turn could possibly reduce the
temperature of the global climate and possibly skew predictions. Since the generally
increasing global temperature has caused melting of ice at the poles, the
volume of the oceans have also risen, creating more water for the carbon
dioxide to be absorbed. This becomes a vicious cycle.
Another
claim made by sceptics is that humans do not cause global warming; in fact that
it is just a natural increase in the Earths levels of carbon dioxide. However,
according to NOAA, over the past two hundred years, the pH of the ocean has
decreased by .1, which converts to approximately a thirty percent decrease. The
pH scale is a measure of acidity from one to fourteen, closer to one is acidic,
closer to fourteen is basic, and seven is neutral. The pH of the oceans has actually
been decreasing steadily since the industrial revolution. This correlates directly with humans first
starting to produce chemicals and materials on a larger scale and using coal
and carbon based fuels to run their machines. The burning of these carbon-based
fuels created more carbon dioxide than had ever been produced naturally or unnaturally
before.
Ocean
acidification also indicates the detrimental effects increased carbon dioxide
can have one the environment. It has an effect on everything from the tiny plankton
to the larger organisms such as fish or marine mammals. These larger fish might
have a harder time breathing and reproducing because of increase carbon
dioxide. Even worse, if this species was
a keystone species, a species that without it the ecosystem would be very
different or not exist at all, and starts to die off it could have drastic consequences
to the ecosystem. For example, sea otters are a keystone species, and when they
became endangered, the sea urchin population skyrocketed. Due to this loss of a
predator, the Sea Urchin’s competitors were greatly out-numbered, could not get
enough food, and began to die off. Then the sea urchin began eating all the
kelp and became one of the only surviving species in the ecosystem. This
example proves that a change in the pH could cause a chain reaction that
affects many ecosystems. The beautiful diverse ecosystem of the ocean could
become a habitat overrun by a single species.
I have lived less than half a mile
from the ocean my whole life. Watching the ocean is something that brings me
clarity. At night hearing the seals
barking soothes me. Right now, at the rate humans are going, the acidity of the
ocean will continue to destroy the habitat. I feel I have an obligation to the
next generation to keep in good condition something that brings me so much joy.
Work
Cited
Ferrara, Peter. "Sorry Global Warming Alarmists, The Earth Is
Cooling." Forbes. Forbes Magazine, 31 May 2012. Web. 15 Feb. 2015.
Nuccitelli, Dana. "The Top Ten Global Warming 'skeptic' Arguments
Answered." The Guardian, 6 May 2014. Web. 15 Feb. 2015
Raven, John. Ocean Acidification Due to Increasing Atmospheric Carbon
Dioxide. London: Royal Society, 2005. NOAA, June 2005. Web. 16 Feb. 2015
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