Bringing oceans to a boil.

AuthorFesta, David
PositionEcology - Global warming

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MARINE BIOLOGIST Chris Rader recalls childhood summers when his father, Environmental Defense scientist Doug Rader, would take him diving in the Virgin Islands: "Schools of butterfly fish and Queen angelfish would swim by," remembers Rader. "I learned to identify hundreds of tropical reef fish."

Later, as a student at the University of North Carolina, the younger Rader was snorkeling off the Tar Heel coast to study temperate-water fish. Much to his surprise, he saw some of the same tropical fish he had seen in the Caribbean. "This was not what I was expecting at all--warm-water fish so flu north," he relates. Yet, the elder Rader confirms that tropical fish showing tip in temperate waters no longer is a rarity. Ocean specialists have spotted larvae of butterfly fish, angelfish, and other tropical sea life floating in coastal waters as far north as Woods Hole, Mass. This evidence points to fish shifting their ranges in response to warming waters.

Observations show that the oceans have been heating tip since 1975. Ocean surface temperatures worldwide have risen on average 0.9[degrees]E and ocean waters in many tropical regions have risen by almost 2[degrees] over the past century. This is 30 times the amount of heat that has been added to the atmosphere, a significant number, even though the ocean has a lot more mass than the atmosphere. Moreover, the incidence of coral bleaching has increased worldwide since 1979, and scientists now generally link these mass events to global warming. The largest bout of coral bleaching ever (1997-98) occurred during the wintriest--at least up until that time--12-month period on record, and in nearly every region of the world. It was a wakeup call that global warming is not just a distant threat.

Scientists have known for a long time that the ocean plays a huge role in climate. Covering 70% of the globe, it stores 1,000 times more heat than the atmosphere, but often overlooked in the public debate on climate change is the ocean's synergistic role--how it responds to the growing amount of heat-trapping gases in the atmosphere.

"Even five years ago, most people had no inkling of the extent to which global warming was affecting the oceans but, slowly, over the years a consensus has been building," asserts Environmental Defense marine ecologist Rod Fujita. "Today, we are witnessing impacts that we largely attribute to warming--like the bleaching of corals, changing fish habitat. We've gone from denial to talking about how to manage the impacts and reduce the threat of climate change."

A tidal wave of studies has swept through the scientific community, making headlines and setting off alarm bells that global warming is happening and its impacts are playing out in the ocean right now. One groundbreaking study about the relationship between oceans and the climate, published in Science, "goes a long way in laying to rest the arguments that atmospheric warming is caused by anything other than man-made greenhouse gases accumulating in the atmosphere," maintains Bill Chameides, chief scientist at Environmental Defense. "This study is a critical piece of the global warming 'jigsaw puzzle'----one of the pieces that enables us to see the overall picture more clearly."

In another headlining study pointing to the rise in temperatures in the Earth's oceans, Scripps Institution of Oceanography scientist Tim Barnett declares, "This is perhaps the most compelling evidence yet that global warming is happening right now and it shows that we can successfully simulate its past and likely future evolution." The findings project water shortages in the western U.S., western China, and the Andes Mountains due to changing rainfall patterns and less snow-pack. Two other studies show that, even if we were to stabilize greenhouse gases at 2000 levels, the Earth's temperature and sea levels would continue to rise over the next 100 years.

"The ship is already in motion, and it will take immediate action to turn it away from the danger ahead," sums up Environmental Defense climate scientist James Wang.

Since humans began burning fossil fuels like coal and gas for power, huge amounts of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases have been released. From the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, the concentration of these greenhouse gases in the atmosphere has soared to levels higher than at any time in the last 420,000 years, warming the Earth on average by 1[degrees] over the last century.

Oceans and forests naturally absorb C[O.sub.2], and sometimes are referred to as "carbon sinks." Seawater absorbs heat as well--it can store four times more heat per unit mass than air. In modern times, human activities have pumped C[O.sub.2] into the atmosphere at a dramatic rate. The oceans have absorbed huge amounts of carbon dioxide and heat in the last 40 years, but not enough to keep these two elements from building up in the atmosphere.

Fujita points out that, because of the huge amount of heat soaked up by water, "The oceans are saving us from faster climate change--in essence, they are a big flywheel that delays rapid overheating of the Earth, putting a brake on the climate system. That's...

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