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Perez, Fiz F; Fontela, Marcos; Garcia-ibanez, Maria Isabel; Mercier, Herle; Velo, Anton; Lherminier, Pascale; Zunino, Patricia; De La Paz, Mercedes; Alonso-perez, Fernando; Guallart, Elisa E.; Padin, Xose A.. |
Since the Industrial Revolution, the North Atlantic Ocean has been accumulating anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) and experiencing ocean acidification1, that is, an increase in the concentration of hydrogen ions (a reduction in pH) and a reduction in the concentration of carbonate ions. The latter causes the ‘aragonite saturation horizon’—below which waters are undersaturated with respect to a particular calcium carbonate, aragonite—to move to shallower depths (to shoal), exposing corals to corrosive waters2,3. Here we use a database analysis to show that the present rate of supply of acidified waters to the deep Atlantic could cause the aragonite saturation horizon to shoal by 1,000–1,700 metres in the subpolar North Atlantic within the next three... |
Tipo: Text |
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Ano: 2018 |
URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00426/53783/55106.pdf |
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