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Source/Letters:   (Reuters)
Link:  
http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/science/02/24/climate.antarctica.reut/index.htm
l


Scientists: Gases 'strangling'
Southern Ocean
POSTED: 9:14 p.m. EST, February 24, 2007
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SYDNEY, Australia (Reuters) -- The pristine Southern Ocean, which swirls
around the Antarctic and absorbs vast amounts of carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere, is slowly losing a fight against industrial gases responsible
for global warming, scientists say.

The Southern Ocean's unique wind and storm conditions make it the world's
greatest carbon "sink"; the earth's oceans absorb a third of the carbon
dioxide in the atmosphere, and the Southern Ocean absorbs a third of that.

But the waters that surround Antarctica are becoming more acidic as they
absorb increasing amounts of carbon dioxide produced by nations burning
fossil fuels such as oil, coal and natural gas.

Deforestation and slash-and-burn farming also releases vast amounts of
carbon dioxide stored in timber or peat bogs.

The more acidic an ocean gets, the less carbon dioxide it can soak up.

"It is becoming more difficult for the Southern Ocean to absorb the excess
carbon dioxide," said Dr Will Howard of Australia's Antarctic Climate and
Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre.

Howard has just returned to the Australian Antarctic and Southern Ocean
Research Program's base in southern Tasmania state after leading a team of
60 international scientists on a five-week expedition to gather evidence on
how ocean systems are struggling to cope with the build-up of greenhouse
gases.

"I would not say it's being killed," Howard said in a telephone interview.
But it is being changed. "And once the system is altered ... it's going to
be a different ecosystem," he said.

Rising acidification of the Southern Ocean has already begun to affect the
ability of plankton -- microscopic marine plants, animals and bacteria -- to
absorb carbon dioxide, scientists have found.

In the sea as on land, plants absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere
through photosynthesis. Oceans soak up carbon dioxide from the air and sink
it to the depths.

CHEMISTRY

Microscopic marine organisms also form tiny shells of calcium carbonate,
which sink when they die to also move carbon to the bottom of the sea.

Projections by the Antarctic Climate & Ecosystems Cooperative Research
Centre indicate that some organisms will not be able to make shells within
the next 100 years, Howard said.

"We're talking about time scales of decades to perhaps a century before at
least some of these shell-making organisms are facing an ocean chemistry
that they cannot make shells in."

Scientists from Australia, France, Belgium, the United States and New
Zealand on board the research ship Aurora Australis have just returned from
gathering extensive seawater samples from east of Tasmania, where the warm,
east Australian current mixes with colder Southern Ocean waters.

This is also an area that carries iron-bearing dust blown off the vast, arid
Australian continent into the sea. And iron is seen as part of a possible
solution.

Scientists have discovered that phytoplankton in the Southern Ocean are
deficient in iron, and that some parts of the Southern Ocean are
persistently more fertile than others, probably because they receive extra
iron.

So should Australia, the world's largest exporter of iron ore for the steel
mills of Asia, throw its iron ore into the sea to help plankton absorb
excess carbon dioxide?

"It's not so easy to manipulate," Howard said.

Copyright 2007 Reuters. All rights reserved.This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

© 2007 Cable News Network.
A Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved.
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This is distibuted for nonprofit research and educational purposes only.
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