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Disparate acidification and calcium carbonate desaturation of deep and shallow waters of the Arctic Ocean
Luo, Y.; Boudreau, B.P.; Mucci, A. (2016). Disparate acidification and calcium carbonate desaturation of deep and shallow waters of the Arctic Ocean. Nature Comm. 7(12821): 8 pp. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms12821
In: Nature Communications. Nature Publishing Group: London. ISSN 2041-1723; e-ISSN 2041-1723, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keyword
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Luo, Y.
  • Boudreau, B.P.
  • Mucci, A.

Abstract
    The Arctic Ocean is acidifying from absorption of man-made CO2. Current predictive models of that acidification focus on surface waters, and their results argue that deep waters will acidify by downward penetration from the surface. Here we show, with an alternative model, the rapid, near simultaneous, acidification of both surface and deep waters, a prediction supported by current, but limited, saturation data. Whereas Arctic surface water responds directly by atmospheric CO2 uptake, deeper waters will be influenced strongly by intrusion of mid-depth, pre-acidified, Atlantic Ocean water. With unabated CO2 emissions, surface waters will become undersaturated with respect to aragonite by 2105 AD and could remain so for ~600 years. In deep waters, the aragonite saturation horizon will rise, reaching the base of the surface mixed layer by 2140 AD and likely remaining there for over a millennium. The survival of aragonite-secreting organisms is consequently threatened on long timescale.

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