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Tums of the sea: how good is the ocean's natural antacid?


Just as a pepperoni pizza with spicy sausage can leave a person reaching for antacids Antacids Definition

Antacids are medicines that neutralize stomach acid.
Purpose

Antacids are used to relieve acid indigestion, upset stomach, sour stomach, and heartburn.
, a diet high in carbon dioxide carbon dioxide, chemical compound, CO2, a colorless, odorless, tasteless gas that is about one and one-half times as dense as air under ordinary conditions of temperature and pressure.  can disrupt the delicate balance of the ocean's chemistry. This odorless o·dor·less  
adj.
Having no odor.



odor·less·ly adv.

o
, tasteless, invisible gas in Earth's atmosphere “Air” redirects here. For other uses, see Air (disambiguation).

Earth's atmosphere is a layer of gases surrounding the planet Earth and retained by the Earth's gravity. It contains roughly (by molar content/volume) 78% nitrogen, 20.95% oxygen, 0.93% argon, 0.
 is the ocean's equivalent of tomato sauce. As the atmosphere mixes with surface seawater seawater

Water that makes up the oceans and seas. Seawater is a complex mixture of 96.5% water, 2.5% salts, and small amounts of other substances. Much of the world's magnesium is recovered from seawater, as are large quantities of bromine.
, carbon dioxide dissolves into the ocean. Some of the gas reacts with water, forming carbonic acid carbonic acid, H2CO3, a weak dibasic acid (see acids and bases) formed when carbon dioxide dissolves in water; it exists only in solution. , [H.sub.2]C[O.sub.3], the same weak acid that appears in carbonated drinks. The more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, the more the gas enters into the surface waters.

The oceans don't swing back and forth in acidity with each fluctuation in atmospheric carbon dioxide because they contain a steadying force. It's their ever-present calcium carbonate calcium carbonate, CaCO3, white chemical compound that is the most common nonsiliceous mineral. It occurs in two crystal forms: calcite, which is hexagonal, and aragonite, which is rhombohedral. , CaC[O.sub.3]--not in mint or berry flavor, but as shells and skeletons of microscopic sea creatures and their dissolved products. The sea floor is lined with this mineral detritus detritus /de·tri·tus/ (de-tri´tus) particulate matter produced by or remaining after the wearing away or disintegration of a substance or tissue.

de·tri·tus
n. pl.
 of long-dead organisms, says David Anderson David Anderson may refer to:
  • David Anderson (Canadian politician) (born 1937), Canadian Liberal politician and former cabinet member
  • David Anderson (bishop) (1814–1885) English Anglican bishop
  • David Anderson (Fictional Character) From
 of the University of Colorado University of Colorado may refer to:
  • University of Colorado at Boulder (flagship campus)
  • University of Colorado at Colorado Springs
  • University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center
  • University of Colorado system
 in Boulder.

Whether in the ocean or stomach, calcium carbonate works as it might in a high school laboratory experiment in acid-base chemistry, says Henry Elderfield of the University of Cambridge in England. In water, calcium carbonate can dissolve into calcium and carbonate (C[O.sub.3.sup.2-]) ions and act like a buffer. When a little acid is added to the solution, the carbonate ions neutralize it. For this reason, the ocean's natural pH--a measure of its acidity--is around 8. That's close to the neutral 7 on a scale of 0 (very acidic) to 14 (very basic).

But buffers have limits. If too much acid is added to a solution, in a high school lab, it's a learning experience. It win be quite a different story if the ocean's calcium carbonate buffer becomes overloaded.

If carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere rise too much, changes in ocean chemistry could disrupt the marine food chain, which is founded on minute, calcium carbonate-making sea creatures. Also troubling is the possibility that the oceans may then remove much less carbon dioxide, a so-called greenhouse gas, from the atmosphere than they do now.

OCEANS ON THE EDGE What are the limits of the ocean's natural buffer? In the present era of rising carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere, this question is especially pressing. By estimates from air trapped in ice cores, the concentration of atmospheric carbon dioxide was about 190 parts per million parts per million

mg/kg or ml/l; see ppm.
 (ppm) during the last ice age about 20,000 years ago and 280 ppm before the industrial revolution. It's now about 370 ppm and is predicted to reach 700 ppm by 2100.

In efforts to determine just how much carbon dioxide--driven change the ocean can handle, researchers are looking at fossils of tiny sea organisms, called foraminifera, preserved since the last ice age. The scientists are searching for evidence of significant global changes in ocean pH that might indicate the ocean's buffering system had been outmatched at times in the past.

The results of one new study of foraminifera shells lead to comforting scenarios in which the ocean, over thousands of years, can handle atmospheric carbon dioxide rises without changing their pH. This evidence flies in the face of work done several years ago. Researchers analyzing boron boron (bōr`ŏn) [New Gr. from borax], chemical element; symbol B; at. no. 5; at. wt. 10.81; m.p. about 2,300°C;; sublimation point about 2,550°C;; sp. gr. 2.3 at 25°C;; valence +3.  isotopes in shells had concluded in 1995 that the ocean has become more acidic since the last ice age.

The recent research focuses on the preservation of microfossils--the calcium carbonate remnants of microscopic marine organisms. The basic premise is this: As atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations rise, the ocean becomes more acidic and calcium carbonate shells dissolve more readily. The chemistry behind this effect is somewhat complex. As carbon dioxide enters the ocean, some of it reacts with dissolved carbonate, which reduces the amount of the ion in the water. As the carbonate ion concentration drops, shells dissolve, releasing the ion into the water.

"We wanted to exploit this effect," says Anderson.

By examining fossilized fos·sil·ize  
v. fos·sil·ized, fos·sil·iz·ing, fos·sil·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To convert into a fossil.

2. To make outmoded or inflexible with time; antiquate.

v.intr.
 shells, he and his coworker co·work·er or co-work·er  
n.
One who works with another; a fellow worker.
 David Archer of the University of Chicago inferred the ocean concentration of carbonate ion and, from that, the acidity of the ocean. The scientists described their findings in the March 7 Nature.

Anderson and Archer developed a new technique to compare the abundance of complete fossils of 29 foraminifer species found in both modern and glacial sediment samples at different ocean depths in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans. For years, researchers have studied this foraminifera data to determine the temperature of ancient seas because ocean-surface temperature is the single biggest predictor of a fossil's abundance in a sample, says Anderson. Dissolution is the second-most-important factor, he says.

Now, it turns out that the carbonate-ion concentration may be teased out of the same data. Some "fragile" foraminifera make shells that are as ornate as a chandelier, so they dissolve more quickly than thicker, hardier shells of "husky" species, Anderson says. The researchers found that--despite varying dissolution susceptibilities of different species--the modern and ancient sediments contained similar ratios of complete shells for the various species. From this evidence, the researchers conclude that there's no evidence of a global change in pH in the deep ocean, where most marine carbon ends up over thousands of years.

According to Anderson, the finding indicates that if carbon dioxide concentrations in the seas rose over the past 20,000 years, as many scientists contend, then the ocean's calcium carbonate system effectively buffered against globe-spanning pH changes in the deep sea. Although short-term pH fluctuations may have occurred, he notes, the evidence suggests that the ocean could handle long-term carbon dioxide increases.

However, the problem of ocean acidity isn't nearly that simple. Wallace S. Broecker Wallace S. Broecker ("Wally") (1931-) is the Newberry Professor in the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at Columbia University and a scientist at Columbia's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.  and Elizabeth Clark of Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO) is a world-class research institution specializing in the Earth sciences and is part of Columbia University. The current director of Lamont is G. Michael Purdy.  in Palisades Palisades, cliffs along the west bank of the Hudson River, NE N.J. and SE N.Y., extending from N of Jersey City, N.J., to the vicinity of Piermont, N.Y., with a general altitude of from 350 ft to 550 ft (107–168 m). , N.Y., also recently examined the dissolution of foraminifera, but they ended up with the opposite result.

Instead of looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 the number of preserved organisms in sediments, Broecker and Clark weighed intact shells for two species of foraminifera. The shell masses have decreased since the last ice age, reflecting an increase in acid-driven dissolution, Broecker and Clark reported in the March 27 Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems.

Broecker notes that Anderson and Archer's data were based on glacial-age fossils collected long ago. Although their methods may be sound, their sample might be faulty, he suggests.

Elderfield agrees that Anderson and Archer used a data set that some researchers view skeptically. However, their new method for determining the ancient ocean's pH is "very clever," he says. Moreover, he notes, assumptions in both studies could have skewed skewed

curve of a usually unimodal distribution with one tail drawn out more than the other and the median will lie above or below the mean.

skewed Epidemiology adjective Referring to an asymmetrical distribution of a population or of data
 their respective calculations.

For example, there may have been some as-yet-unknown condition that made the rates of dissolution of calcium carbonate shells in glacial ages and now different. A complication that Elderlield and his Cambridge colleague Stephen Barker report in the Aug. 2 Science is that climate and other factors seem to cause foraminifera to grow lighter shells today than in glacial times, he says.

One thing that these results--and those of other recent studies--do imply, Elderfield says, is that scientists don't fully understand how the ocean handles carbon dioxide. Without this knowledge, he asserts, researchers shouldn't push for schemes designed to artificially sequester sequester v. to keep separate or apart. In so-called "high-profile" criminal prosecutions (involving major crimes, events, or persons given wide publicity) the jury is sometimes "sequestered" in a hotel without access to news media, the general public or their  atmospheric carbon dioxide in the sea. These have included plans for widespread seeding of oceans with nutrients to stimulate organisms' uptake of carbon dioxide or for pumping excess carbon dioxide to the seafloor (SN: 6/19/99, p. 392).

What's more, Elderfield adds, although studies like those of Anderson and Broecker aim to discern trends in ocean chemistry spanning thousands of years, they don't address the most pressing question: What's going to happen in the next 100 years?

THE PHYTOPLANKTON phytoplankton

Flora of freely floating, often minute organisms that drift with water currents. Like land vegetation, phytoplankton uses carbon dioxide, releases oxygen, and converts minerals to a form animals can use.
 FACTOR Researchers at the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research The Alfred Wegener Institute of Polar and Marine Research is a scientific organization located in Bremerhaven, Germany. The institute was founded in 1980 and is named after revolutionary meteorologist climatologist, and geologist Alfred Wegener.  in Bremerhaven, Germany, are studying shorter-term ocean effects of rising atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations. They're performing laboratory experiments with microscopic shell-building phytoplank ton known as coccolithophores.

Ingrid Zondervan and her colleagues work with two species of coccolithophores that scientists consider to be responsible for making a large portion of the ocean's calcium carbonate. The German researchers put the phytoplankton in bottles, exposed them to varying concentrations of dissolved carbon dioxide, and then measured the carbon in the organisms. This enabled the team to calculate shell production for particular concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide, including those from pre-industrial times and that expected in the year 2100.

Earlier studies had shown that calcium-carbonate-making marine organisms, such as coral and foraminifera, decrease production of the mineral when ocean concentrations of carbonate ion decrease. This makes sense--there's less carbonate available for making calcium carbonate. Since rising concentrations of carbon dioxide in the air decrease the amount of carbonate ion present in the ocean despite shells' dissolving, it seemed plausible that organisms would make less calcium carbonate under conditions of high carbon dioxide, says Zondervan.

Indeed, that's what the researchers have observed. In one way, however, this result was surprising, says Zondervan. The-two species of coccolithophores that she and her colleagues studied make support structures of calcium carbonate inside their cells rather than in exterior shells.

"We thought maybe they could cope with the changes in seawater chemistry--that maybe they don't depend on it," says Zondervan. "But they did."

Using their experimental results and similar ones from another research group, Zondervan and her colleagues modeled the ocean-surface conditions for atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations projected through 2150 by an international group of scientists, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change “IPCC” redirects here. For other uses, see IPCC (disambiguation).
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) was established in 1988 by two United Nations organizations, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and the United Nations Environment
 (IPCC See IMS Forum. ), in a 1995 report. She and her coworkers determined that as carbon dioxide increases in the atmosphere, the coccolithophores will not only make less shell but also produce less carbon dioxide, a byproduct by·prod·uct or by-prod·uct  
n.
1. Something produced in the making of something else.

2. A secondary result; a side effect.

Noun 1.
 of the calcification calcification /cal·ci·fi·ca·tion/ (kal?si-fi-ka´shun) the deposit of calcium salts in a tissue.

dystrophic calcification
 process.

In this way, the organisms exert a negative feedback on rising carbon dioxide, says Zondervan. She and her colleagues from the Alfred Wegener Institute reported their results in the June 2001 Global Biogeochemical Cycles.

Although this effect might seem comforting to those worried about rises in atmospheric carbon dioxide, the coccolithophores' reduction of carbon dioxide isn't nearly enough to counteract the carbon dioxide currently being injected into the environment by human activity, notes Zondervan.

More importantly, she points out, this is only "the immediate effect of a decrease in calcification on the ocean chemistry. We have to see whether there are other effects which we don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 of--and maybe the effect will be reversed again"

By way of example, she points out that organisms further up the food chain eat coccolithophores. When the coccolithophores contain less calcium carbonate, bigger creatures might consume more of them because they're tastier or the drop in calcium carbonate might decrease sunlight reflectance. This could let light penetrate to other phytoplankton in deeper water, causing further perturbations in the food chain and the ocean's carbonate system.

Even as the scientists realize they have only begun to untangle the intricacies of ocean chemistry in general and of the calcium carbonate cycle in particular, Zondervan says one thing is clear: "We are already changing the ocean chemistry, that's an experiment that's already going on."
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Title Annotation:calcium carbonate creates balance in the ocean
Author:Gorman, Jessica
Publication:Science News
Date:Aug 17, 2002
Words:1835
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