Deep-ocean, sediment-dwelling animals are sensitive to sequestered carbon dioxide

被引:35
作者
Thistle, D [1 ]
Carman, KR
Sedlacek, L
Brewer, PG
Fleeger, JW
Barry, JP
机构
[1] Florida State Univ, Dept Oceanog, Tallahassee, FL 32306 USA
[2] Louisiana State Univ, Dept Biol Sci, Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA
[3] Monterey Bay Aquarium Res Inst, Moss Landing, CA 95039 USA
关键词
global warming; CO2; sequestration; deep sea; benthic infauna; harpacticoid copepods; diversity;
D O I
10.3354/meps289001
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The burning of fossil fuel is producing the greenhouse gas CO2 at a rate that is causing global warming and threatens to change the global environment adversely. One proposed solution involves sequestering in the deep sea a substantial portion of the excess CO2 produced. Because large areas would be affected and this environment harbors one of the world's largest reservoirs of biodiversity, the approach is controversial. In particular, deep-sea diversity is found largely in the animals that live in the sediment, but the effects of sequestered CO2 on these organisms are not known. We therefore introduced similar to 60 1 of liquid CO2 onto the seafloor at 3250 m depth and sampled similar to 2 and similar to 40 m from the deposition site 30 d later. The pore water in the samples taken near the site was 0.75 pH unit more acidic (pH decreases when CO2 concentration increases) than that in samples taken farther away, Representative infauna had been killed in significantly greater numbers in the former than in the latter location. This demonstration that sequestered CO2 can adversely affect the deep-sea infauna brings CO2 sequestration in the deep sea into potential conflict with the preservation of deep-sea biodiversity.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 4
页数:4
相关论文
共 14 条
[1]   Influence of introduced CO2 on deep-sea metazoan meiofauna [J].
Carman, KR ;
Thistle, D ;
Fleeger, JW ;
Barry, JP .
JOURNAL OF OCEANOGRAPHY, 2004, 60 (04) :767-772
[2]   EXTIRPATION OF CRAYFISH IN A LAKE AFFECTED BY LONG-RANGE ANTHROPOGENIC ACIDIFICATION [J].
FRANCE, RL ;
COLLINS, NC .
CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 1993, 7 (01) :184-188
[3]   The deep-sea floor ecosystem: current status and prospects of anthropogenic change by the year 2025 [J].
Glover, AG ;
Smith, CR .
ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION, 2003, 30 (03) :219-241
[4]   DEEP-SEA SPECIES RICHNESS - REGIONAL AND LOCAL DIVERSITY ESTIMATES FROM QUANTITATIVE BOTTOM SAMPLES [J].
GRASSLE, JF ;
MACIOLEK, NJ .
AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1992, 139 (02) :313-341
[5]   Capturing greenhouse gases [J].
Herzog, H ;
Eliasson, B ;
Kaarstad, O .
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, 2000, 282 (02) :72-79
[6]  
HESSLER RR, 1967, DEEP-SEA RES, V14, P65
[7]   Advanced technology paths to global climate stability: Energy for a greenhouse planet [J].
Hoffert, MI ;
Caldeira, K ;
Benford, G ;
Criswell, DR ;
Green, C ;
Herzog, H ;
Jain, AK ;
Kheshgi, HS ;
Lackner, KS ;
Lewis, JS ;
Lightfoot, HD ;
Manheimer, W ;
Mankins, JC ;
Mauel, ME ;
Perkins, LJ ;
Schlesinger, ME ;
Volk, T ;
Wigley, TML .
SCIENCE, 2002, 298 (5595) :981-987
[8]  
LAMBSHEAD PJD, 1993, OCEANIS S D, V19, P5
[9]   Marine nematode deep-sea biodiversity - hyperdiverse or hype? [J].
Lambshead, PJD ;
Boucher, G .
JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2003, 30 (04) :475-485
[10]  
Ormerod W G., 2002, Ocean Storage of CO2