VLIZ
VLAAMS INSTITUUT VOOR DE ZEE
MARIEN EN KUSTGEBONDEN ONDERZOEK & BELEID IN VLAANDEREN
   
© VLIZ © VLIZ © VLIZ © VLIZ © VLIZ
 
 
  English  Sitemap  Print
U bent hier: VLIZ > datacentrum
menu1 Over het VLIZ menu2 Infoloket menu3 Zeebibliotheek menu4 Cijfers&Beleid menu5 Faciliteiten menu6 Datacentrum
   
Datacentrum
  - IMIS: Integrated Marine Information System -
log in

Personen | Instituten | Publicaties | Projecten | Datasets | Kaarten
meld een fout in dit recordmandje (0): toevoegen | tonen Print-vriendelijke versie

Long-term responses of North Atlantic calcifying plankton to climate changePeer reviewed article
Beaugrand, G.; McQuatters-Gollop, A.; Edwards, M.; Goberville, E. (2012). Long-term responses of North Atlantic calcifying plankton to climate change Nat. Clim. Chang. Online First: 1-5. hdl.handle.net/10.1038/nclimate1753
In: Nature Climate Change. Nature Publishing Group: London. ISSN 1758-678X, meer

Beschikbaar in Auteurs 

Trefwoord
    Marien

Auteurs  Top 

Abstract
    The global increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration is potentially threatening marine biodiversity in two ways. First, carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases accumulating in the atmosphere are causing global warming. Second, carbon dioxide is altering sea water chemistry, making the ocean more acidic. Although temperature has a cardinal influence on all biological processes from the molecular to the ecosystem level, acidification might impair the process of calcification or exacerbate dissolution of calcifying organisms. Here, we show however that North Atlantic calcifying plankton primarily responded to climate-induced changes in temperatures during the period 1960–2009, overriding the signal from the effects of ocean acidification. We provide evidence that foraminifers, coccolithophores, both pteropod and non-pteropod molluscs and echinoderms exhibited an abrupt shift circa 1996 at a time of a substantial increase in temperature and that some taxa exhibited a poleward movement in agreement with expected biogeographical changes under sea temperature warming. Although acidification may become a serious threat to marine calcifying organisms, our results suggest that over the study period the primary driver of North Atlantic calcifying plankton was oceanic temperature.

 Top | Auteurs 
 

 

Vlaams Instituut voor de Zee
InnovOcean site
Wandelaarkaai 7
B-8400 OOSTENDE, België
Tel: +32 [0]59/34 21 30
Fax: +32 [0]59/34 21 31
Email: info@vliz.be
   

 

Vlaamse Gemeenschap Provincie West-Vlaanderen