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Barrett808 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Oct-14-08 09:14 PM
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The krilling fields: study fears catastrophe in Antarctic food chain
The krilling fields: study fears catastrophe in Antarctic food chain
Andrew Darby, Hobart
October 14, 2008

THE first evidence suggests that a predicted rise of atmospheric carbon dioxide will wreak havoc on krill, the tiny crustacean at the heart of the Antarctic food web.

Although public sympathy for the crustacean is undetectable, polar life such as penguins, seals and whales would wither without it.

Captive-bred krill at the Australian Antarctic Division developed deformities and lost energy when they were exposed to the greenhouse gas at levels predicted globally for the year 2100.

The damage meant that the krill were unlikely ever to breed, a University of Tasmania investigator, Lilli Hale, said yesterday.

Polar life, from tiny seabirds through penguins and seals to whales, depend for food on Antarctic krill, Euphasia superba.

A loss of krill suggested there would be a catastrophic impact on these other species, Ms Hale said.

The level of atmospheric carbon dioxide now stands at 384 parts per million (up 100 ppm since 1832), according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. At a worst case it could reach around 900 ppm in 2100, IPCC models show.

Carbon dioxide is absorbed by the sea most easily in the colder Southern Ocean, which becomes more acidic, interfering with the formation of calcium carbonate.

Organisms, including krill, rely on calcium for the formation of their shells.

(more)

http://www.theage.com.au/environment/the-krilling-fields-study-fears-catastrophe-in-antarctic-food-chain-20081013-4zxo.html
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Nihil Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-15-08 03:58 AM
Response to Original message
1. Oops.
Alternatively, OFHWAD.

> "At the microbial level some species might have time to evolve," Dr Nicol
> said. "But longer-lived animals like krill won't have time to adapt to
> higher levels of carbon dioxide.

So the worst case projection (900ppm = 2.3x current) kills the krill when
taken in isolation (i.e., ignoring any knock-on effects that panic-stricken
humans will add to the mix in the process of getting to 900ppm).

Bear in mind that this is only examining the acidification effects of the
increased CO2 on krill alone, not the temperature effects, current effects
nor interaction with any other marine life.

> "The next step is for us to conduct longer studies at lower carbon dioxide
> levels to see what krill can cope with."

That'll be nice. We'll be eating krill directly before we get to the above
levels so maybe we'll just force them to extinction in our usual way rather
than through any more exotic method.

K&R
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