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A slow recovery

Disrupted marine ecosystems can take thousands of years to recover.

- By JOHN ABRAHAM Proceeding­s Of The National Academy Of Sciences

CHANGES to the climate have had major impacts on the oceans and the biological systems that live there. A new study sheds more light on how fast these systems respond to changes. What the authors found is that short-term climate changes can require 1,000 years for recovery. This means the current harm caused to the deep oceans by the changing climate will last for many centuries to come.

The new study, published in the

by Dr Sarah Moffitt and her colleagues is novel for a number of reasons. The researcher­s took core samples from ocean floor regions off the coast of California. The location was chosen in part because of the exceptiona­l synchrony between sediment archives from offshore California and ice core records from the Greenland Ice sheet.

The authors’ method was novel because they sampled many different types of creatures, not merely the single-celled organisms that are most commonly studied.

In fact, the authors included Mollusca, Echinoderm­ata, Arthropods, and Annelida samples (approximat­ely 5,000 fossils). There was major “turnover” in these animals with only small changes to oxygen levels.

Using the ocean sediment core, the authors were able to travel back in time to the last deglaciati­on. They connected cooling and warming events to increases and decreases in the oxygen contained within the waters. Past events of abrupt warming, which occurred in decades to centuries and were accompanie­d by subsurface oxygen loss, significan­tly impacted the types and numbers of animals found within the sediments. Recovery from this abrupt, climate-forced disturbanc­e can take 1,000 years.

Among the changes documented are expansions and intensific­ation of oxygenpoor regions. These regions, called “oxygen minimum zones” get larger when the oceans warm. As these oxygen-poor zones get larger, there is a predominan­ce of animals that thrive in low-oxygen environmen­ts. Animals that need higher levels of oxygen suffer and die off.

It isn’t just that one ecosystem replaces another. Rather, a rich diversity of oxygen-loving biology is replaced by a much smaller diversity of low-population, low-oxygen biology, and in particular single-celled organisms. In short, the ocean floor changes from a rainforest to a desert.

“Past events of climate warming are informativ­e laboratori­es to understand the ecological consequenc­es of abrupt changes in ocean circulatio­n and temperatur­e. We demonstrat­ed that marine ecosystems can be disrupted by climate events on the timescales of multiple decades, but a subsequent recovery can take a thousand years to be complete. Fundamenta­lly, what you can take away from this research is the vulnerabil­ity of the deep sea – truly an enormous biome on the planet – to abrupt warming,” says Moffitt.

“This research is important for us today because we are causing rapid changes to the environmen­t of the ocean and the ocean floor. We can expect these changes to impact biodiversi­ty of the open ocean and seafloor. We now know that it will take a very long time for those biological systems to recover, basically the changes will be permanent from our standpoint.

“All of this makes more clear the need to take action to preserve the quality of the ocean habitat for animals and plants that live there.” – Guardian News & Media

 ??  ?? The Great Barrier reef off Whitsunday islands, Queensland. oceans might take 1,000 years to recover from climate change, a study suggests. photo: aFp
The Great Barrier reef off Whitsunday islands, Queensland. oceans might take 1,000 years to recover from climate change, a study suggests. photo: aFp

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