Categories: Cryosphere Capsules

Only Low Emissions Can Protect Even Best-case Antarctic MPAs from Severe Ocean Acidification

Nature Communications, 4 January 2024

Only the lowest emissions scenarios (SSP1-2.6) with rapid and aggressive fossil fuel reductions can prevent “severe” acidification in the Southern Ocean, while even intermediate scenarios (SSP 2-4.5 and above) will expose ecosystems along the Antarctic continental shelves to increasingly hazardous conditions from surface to seafloor. Plankton at the base of the food web will grow at a slower rate or die out when the water becomes too acidic, with harm extending to shelled creatures and disrupting higher trophic levels all the way to top predators, such as whales and penguins. Authors highlighted the need to establish more Marine Protected Areas (MPAs); especially in the Weddell Sea, which could serve as a sanctuary from acidification due to its higher sea ice coverage shielding that region from the most rapid warming and acidification. However, even the Weddell Sea’s protective status ultimately will disappear with anything but the lowest emissions pathways, with only a slight delay in severe acidification under intermediate or high emissions.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-44438-x

Pam Pearson

Recent Posts

Carbon and Nitrogen Release Due to Melting Permafrost in Arctic River Deltas

Nature Communications, 29 May 2026 The soils of Arctic river deltas store large amounts of…

1 week ago

Himalayan Mountain Infrastructure Increasingly Exposed to Climate Risks

Scientific Reports, 27 May 2026 Rising global temperatures increase the exposure of communities and infrastructure…

1 week ago

Permafrost Thaw Increases Infrastructure Risks and Economic Inequality in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau

Global Environmental Change, 20 May 2026 In the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, reducing greenhouse gas emissions could…

1 week ago

Warming Near 1.5°C Commits Coastal Louisiana to Substantial Sea-Level Rise

Nature Sustainability, 4 May 2026 Sediment records from the Last Inter-Glacial (LIG) period suggest that…

2 weeks ago

Over Four Decades of Winter Arctic Sea Ice Loss Primarily Driven by GHG Emissions

NPJ Climate and Atmospheric Science, 20 May 2026 Human-caused warming has been the primary driver…

2 weeks ago

Sudden Meltwater Lake Drainage Speeds Up Greenland Ice Loss

Nature Communications, 27 May 2026 Sudden drainage of meltwater lakes through water-filled fractures can locally…

2 weeks ago