Your Outlines? Exam 2? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 23
About This Presentation
Title:

Your Outlines? Exam 2?

Description:

YOUR OUTLINES? EXAM 2? *?? - what is the latest news?? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:103
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 24
Provided by: Owne31149
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Your Outlines? Exam 2?


1
Your Outlines?Exam 2?
  • ?? -gt what is the latest news??

2
Coastal Zones and Marine Ecosystems
  • Chapter 6, IPCC (2001)

3
Oceans so what?
  • 70 of the Earths surface
  • Regulate the Earths climate
  • Modulate the global biogeochemical cycles
  • Supplies of resources and products worth
    trillions of dollars each year
  • Function as areas of recreation and tourism,
    medium for transportation, repository of genetic
    and biological information, sinks for wastes
    (these functions are also shared by the coastal
    margins of the oceans)

4
Humans and Oceans
  • 20 of the worlds human population live w/in
    30 km of the sea 40 live w/in the nearest 100
    km of the coast
  • 600 million people will occupy coastal floodplain
    land below the 1,000-year flood level by 2100
  • ?climate change will affect the physical,
    biological, and biogeochemical characteristics of
    the oceans and coasts at different time and space
    scales ? positive feedback on the climate system
  • Note the oceans already under stress. From what?
    Consequence of this stress?

5
  • ? what are the potential impacts of climate
    change on the coastal zone, marine ecosystems,
    and marine fisheries
  • First what do we know

6
State of Knowledge
  • Global warming will affect the oceans through
    changes in sea-surface temperature (SST), sea
    level, ice cover, ocean circulation, and wave
    climate
  • Ocean conveyor belt -gt global ocean thermohaline
    circulation system emphasizes the role of the
    global ocean as a climate regulator
  • Projections
  • SST-induced shifts in the geographic distribution
    of marine biota and changes in biodiversity,
    particularly in high latitudes
  • Decrease in ice-infested waters
  • Sea-level changes from thermal expansion

7
State of knowledge Low certainty
  • Changes in the efficiency of carbon uptake
    through circulation and mixing effects on
    nutrient availability and primary productivity
  • Changes in ocean uptake and storage capacity for
    GHG
  • Potential instability in the climate system
    caused by freshwater influx to the oceans and
    weakening of the ocean conveyor belt

8
Marine Ecosystems
  • A general warming of a large part of the world
    oceans during the past 50 years
  • Overall increase associated with land-based
    global temperature trends
  • Global mean sea-level has risen by about 0.10.2
    mm yr-1 over the past 3,000 years and by 12 mm
    yr-1 since 1900, with a central value of 1.5 mm
    yr-1
  • Suggested maximum intensity of tropical cyclones
    may rise by 10-20 might persist for longer time
    due to increased SST

9
Ocean conveyor belt.
  • Role in controlling the distribution of heat and
    GHG
  • Circulation driven by differences in seawater
    temperature and salinity
  • Some evidence will weaken (Slow down? Stop?) due
    to climate change
  • (more on this later)

10
Marine Ecosystems Sea Ice
  • 11 of the ocean (seasonal)
  • Affects
  • salinity
  • ocean-atmosphere thermal exchange
  • Determining the intensity of convention in the
    ocean, and thus the mean time scale of deep-ocean
    processes affecting carbon dioxide update and
    storage
  • Changes
  • Large reductions in the extent, thickness and
    duration of sea ice
  • Already significant decrease in spring and
    summer sea-ice by 10-15 since the 1950s in the
    northern hemisphere
  • may be underestimated due to significant thinning
    of sea ice in the Arctic may be as much as
    25between 1950s-1970s

11
Marine Ecosystems Biological Processes
  • Can sequester CO2 and remove carbon to the ocean
    interior biological pump
  • Rise in temperature ? faster biodegradation
    faster dispersal of global organic pollutants
  • Photosynthesis (the major process by which marine
    biota sequester carbon dioxide) controlled by
    the availability of nutrients and trace elements
    (eg iron)
  • Climate change could affect the inputs of
    nutrients and iron to the ocean
  • Greatest impact in semi-enclosed seas and bays

12
Also
  • CC can shift structure of biological communities
    in the upper ocean. Change stratificationcan
    impact the biological bump

13
Marine Ecosystems Marine Carbon Dioxide Uptake
  • Oceans taken up 30 (great uncertainty) of
    carbon dioxide emissions between 1980 and 1989
  • How?
  • Burial of organic carbon in marine sediment -gt
    removing atmospheric carbon dioxide for prolonged
    time periods
  • But
  • If CC could reduce ability to carbon uptake
  • (latest news you tell me)
  • Also weakening the conveyor belt -gt reduce
    oceans ability to absorb carbon dioxide
  • With a doubling of CO2 scenario, ocean uptake of
    CO2 dropped by 30 over a 350-yr period

14
Marine Ecosystems Marine Fish
  • Because climatic factors affect the biotic and
    abiotic elements -gt they influence the numbers
    and distribution of fish species
  • What are the abiotic factors?
  • Water temperature
  • Salinity
  • Nutrients
  • Sea level
  • Amount of sea ice
  • And the biotic factors?
  • Food availability
  • Presence and species composition of competitors
    and predators
  • Water temperature directly impacts
  • Spawning and survival of larvae and juveniles,
    and fish growth
  • Biological production rate -gt food avalability

15
Marine Ecosystems Marine Fish
  • Variations (with cycles of 10-60 yrs) in the
    biomass volume of marine organisms depend on sea
    temperature and climate
  • Eg fishing for cod in the Atlantic Ocean clear
    correlation between water temp and catch
  • Thus important to consider the ecosystem impacts
    of climate variations changes for individual
    species

16
More on marine fish
  • Herrings, sardines and anchovies shortlived
    species that mature at an early age
  • Large fluctuations in abundance associated with
    changes in the climate-ocean environment
  • Most fishing regime changes can be related
    directly to sea-temperature changes, but changes
    in other physical attributes also can have an
    impact.
  • Example a decrease in wind stress o f Tasmania
    that reduced large zooplankton production a ff e
    c ted the density of Jack mackerel, which
    eliminated the possibility of a commercially
    viable mackerel fishery

17
  • As ecosystems change, there may be impacts on the
    distribution and survival of fishes.
  • Any changes in natural mortality would be
    associated with increased predation and other
    factors such as disease.
  • Improved growth in the early life stages would
    improve survival, whereas decreased growth could
    facilitate increased mortality.
  • cautious acceptance that climate change will have
    major positive and negative impacts on the
    abundance and distribution of marine fish.
  • Fishing impacts may be particularly harmful if
    natural declines in productivity occur without
    corresponding reductions in exploitation rates.

18
Marine Mammals and Seabirds
  • Sensitive indicators of changes in ocean
    environments
  • Fluctuations in marine bird and mammal
    populations in the North Pacific may be entirely
    related to climate variations and change
  • Climate variations since 1990 overfishing ?
    behavioral changes in killer whales ? reduced sea
    otter abundance ? changed the ecology of the kelp
    forests
  • The changes in prey resulting from persistent
    changes in climate appear to be one of the
    important impacts of a changing climate on the
    marine mammals that feed from the top of the food
    chain.
  • CC ? effect access to prey among marine mammals
  • Eg ice-free seasons in the Arctic ? prolong
    fasting of polar bears
  • Reductions in sea ice have been predicted to
    alter the seasonal distributions, geographic
    ranges, migration patterns, nutritional status,
    reproductive success, and ultimately the
    abundance of Arctic marine mammals

19
Seabirds
  • May consume vast amounts of fish (600,000 t/yr in
    the North Atlantic 20-30 of the annual pelagic
    fish production)
  • Hard to distinguish CC from overfishing
  • How likely is it to survive? ? depends on its
    ability to alter its migration strategy
  • Long lifespans and genetic variation within
    populations enable seabirds to survive adverse
    short-term environmental events,
  • However, small populations tied to restricted
    habitat, such as the Galapagos Penguin may be
    threatened by long-term climate warming

20
Diseases and Toxicity
  • Changes in precipitation, pH, water temperature,
    wind, dissolved CO2, and salinity can affect
    water quality in estuarine and marine waters.
  • Some marine disease organisms and algal species
    are strongly influenced by one or more of these
    factors
  • increase in reports of diseases affecting closely
    monitored marine organisms, such as coral and
    seagrasses, particularly in the Caribbean and
    temperate oceans
  • several viruses, protozoa, and bacteria affected
    by climatic factors can affect people, by direct
    contact or by seafood consumption.
  • Example bacterium found in oysters cholera
    epidemics associated with marine plankton

21
Coastal Systems
  • Existence of many depends on the land-sea
    connection
  • Wide range of environmental conditions
  • Salinity (fresh to hypersaline)
  • Energy (sheltered wetlands to energetic
    wave-washed shorelines)
  • Spectrum of climate types tropical to polar
  • Exposed to land-source and marine hazards, waves,
    river flooding, shoreline erosion, biohazards
    (algal blooms and pollutants)
  • Know Box 6.3 and Box 6.4

22
Coastal Systems
  • Beaches, Barriers, Cliff Coasts
  • More erosion with CC likely changes in wave or
    storm patterns
  • What about presence/absence of biotic protection
    such as mangroves?
  • Deltaic Coasts (low-lying coastal regions)
  • Exposed to potential flooding
  • Nile significant land loss can result from wave
    erosion also large portions of the Amazon
  • Saltwater intrusion into freshwater aquifers
  • Coastal Wetlands
  • By 2080, sea-level rise ? loss of 22 of worlds
    coastal wetlands (mangrove forest and salt
    marsh) much already lost
  • Tropical Reef Coasts
  • More than 25 of all known marine fish food
    source 58 at risk from human activities. Global
    CC could be an additional cause
  • Sea-level rise increased carbon dioxide levels
    temperature
  • Latest news
  • High-Latitude Coasts (ice-rich coasts)

23
Latest News
  • Based on current model simulations, the
    Meridional Overturning Circulation (MOC) of the
    Atlantic Ocean will very likelyslow down during
    the 21st century nevertheless temperatures over
    the Atlantic and Europe are projected to
    increase.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com