3. Oceans of the World
in Extreme Danger
Source: Mother Jones, March /April, 2006,
Title: The Fate of the Ocean, Author: Julia Whitty
Faculty Evaluator: Dolly
Freidel
Student Researcher: Charlene Jones
Oceanic problems once found
on a local scale are now pandemic. Data from oceanography, marine biology, meteorology,
fishery science, and glaciology reveal that the seas are changing in ominous ways.
A vortex of cause and effect wrought by global environmental dilemmas is changing
the ocean from a watery horizon with assorted regional troubles to a global system
in alarming distress.
According to oceanographers the oceans are one, with
currents linking the seas and regulating climate. Sea temperature and chemistry
changes, along with contamination and reckless fishing practices, intertwine to
imperil the worlds largest communal life source.
In 2005, researchers
from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and the Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory found clear evidence the ocean is quickly warming. They discovered
that the top half-mile of the ocean has warmed dramatically in the past forty
years as a result of human-induced greenhouse gases.
One manifestation
of this warming is the melting of the Arctic. A shrinking ratio of ice to water
has set off a feedback loop, accelerating the increase in water surfaces that
promote further warming and melting. With polar waters growing fresher and tropical
seas saltier, the cycle of evaporation and precipitation has quickened, further
invigorating the greenhouse effect. The oceans currents are reacting to
this freshening, causing a critical conveyor that carries warm upper waters into
Europes northern latitudes to slow by one third since 1957, bolstering fears
of a shut down and cataclysmic climate change. This accelerating cycle of cause
and effect will be difficult, if not impossible, to reverse.
Atmospheric
litter is also altering sea chemistry, as thousands of toxic compounds poison
marine creatures and devastate propagation. The ocean has absorbed an estimated
118 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide since the onset of the Industrial Revolution,
with 20 to 25 tons being added to the atmosphere daily. Increasing acidity from
rising levels of CO2 is changing the oceans PH balance. Studies indicate
that the shells and skeletons possessed by everything from reef-building corals
to mollusks and plankton begin to dissolve within forty-eight hours of exposure
to the acidity expected in the ocean by 2050. Coral reefs will almost certainly
disappear and, even more worrisome, so will plankton. Phytoplankton absorb greenhouse
gases, manufacture oxygen, and are the primary producers of the marine food web.
Mercury pollution enters the food web via coal and chemical industry waste,
oxidizes in the atmosphere, and settles to the sea bottom. There it is consumed,
delivering mercury to each subsequent link in the food chain, until predators
such as tuna or whales carry levels of mercury as much as one million times that
of the waters around them. The Gulf of Mexico has the highest mercury levels ever
recorded, with an average of ten tons of mercury coming down the Mississippi River
every year, and another ton added by offshore drilling.
Along with mercury,
the Mississippi delivers nitrogen (often from fertilizers). Nitrogen stimulates
plant and bacterial growth in the water that consume oxygen, creating a condition
known as hypoxia, or dead zones. Dead zones occur wherever oceanic oxygen is depleted
below the level necessary to sustain marine life. A sizable portion of the Gulf
of Mexico has become a dead zonethe largest such area in the U.S. and the
second largest on the planet, measuring nearly 8,000 square miles in 2001. It
is no coincidence that almost all of the nearly 150 (and counting) dead zones
on earth lay at the mouths of rivers. Nearly fifty fester off U.S. coasts. While
most are caused by river-borne nitrogen, fossil fuel-burning plants help create
this condition, as does phosphorous from human sewage and nitrogen emissions from
auto exhaust.
Meanwhile, since its peak in 2000, the global wild fish harvest
has begun a sharp decline despite progress in seagoing technologies and intensified
fishing. So-called efficiencies in fishing have stimulated unprecedented decimation
of sealife. Long-lining, in which a single boat sets line across sixty or more
miles of ocean, each baited with up to 10,000 hooks, captures at least 25 percent
unwanted catch. With an estimated 2 billion hooks set each year, as much as 88
billion pounds of life a year is thrown back to the ocean either dead or dying.
Additionally, trawlers drag nets across every square inch of the continental shelves
every two years. Fishing the sea floor like a bulldozer, they level an area 150
times larger than all forest clearcuts each year and destroy seafloor ecosystems.
Aquaculture is no better, since three pounds of wild fish are caught to feed every
pound of farmed salmon. A 2003 study out of Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia
concluded, based on data dating from the 1950s, that in the wake of decades of
such onslaught only 10 percent of all large fish (tuna, swordfish) and ground
fish (cod, hake, flounder) are left anywhere in the ocean.
Other sea nurseries
are also threatened. Fifteen percent of seagrass beds have disappeared in the
last ten years, depriving juvenile fish, manatees, and sea turtles of critical
habitats. Kelp beds are also dying at alarming rates.
While at no time
in history has science taught more about how the earths life-support systems
work, the maelstrom of human assault on the seas continues. If human failure in
governance of the worlds largest public domain is not reversed quickly,
the ocean will soon and surely reach a point of no return.
Comment:
After
release of the Pew Oceans Commission report, U.S. media, most notably The Washington
Post and National Public Radio in 2003 and 2004, covered several stories regarding
impending threats to the ocean, recommendations for protection, and President
Bushs response. However, media treatment of the collective acceleration
of ocean damage and cross-pollination of harm was left to Julia Whitty in her
lengthy feature. In April of 2006, Time Magazine presented an in-depth article
about earth at the tipping point, describing the planet as an overworked
organism fighting the consequences of global climate change on shore and sea.
In her Mother Jones article, Whitty presented a look at global illness by directly
examining the ocean as earths circulatory, respiratory, and reproductive
system.
Following up on The Last Days of the Ocean, Mother
Jones has produced Ocean Voyager, an innovative web-based adventure
that includes videos, audio interviews with key players, webcams, and links to
informative web pages created by more than twenty organizations. The site is a
tour of various ocean trouble spots around the world, which highlights solutions
and suggests actions that can be taken to help make a difference.
UPDATE
BY JULIA WHITTY
This story is awash with new developments. Scientists
are currently publishing at an unprecedented rate their observationsnot
just predictionson the rapid changes underway on our ocean planet. First
and foremost, the year 2005 turned out to be the warmest year on record. This
reinforces other data showing the earth has grown hotter in the past 400 years,
and possibly in the past 2,000 years. A study out of the National Center for Atmospheric
Research found ocean temperatures in the tropical North Atlantic in 2005 nearly
two degrees Fahrenheit above normal; this turned out to be the predominant catalyst
for the monstrous 2005 hurricane seasonthe most violent season ever seen.
The
news from the polar ice is no better. A joint NASA/University of Kansas study
in Science (02/06) reveals that Greenlands glaciers are surging towards
the sea and melting more than twice as fast as ten years ago. This further endangers
the critical balance of the North Atlantic meridional overturning circulation,
which holds our climate stable. Meanwhile, in March, the British Antarctic Survey
announced their findings that the global warming signature of the
Antarctic is three times larger than what were seeing elsewhere on Earththe
first proof of broadscale climate change across the southern continent.
Since
The Fate of the Ocean went to press in Mother Jones magazine, evidence
of the politicization of science in the global climate wars has also emerged.
In January 2006 NASAs top climate scientist, James Hansen, accused the agency
of trying to censor his work. Four months later, Hansens accusations were
echoed by scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, as
well as by a U.S. Geological Survey scientist working at a NOAA lab, who claimed
their work on global climate change was being censored by their departments, as
part of a policy of intimidation by the anti-science Bush administration.
Problems
for the oceans wildlife are escalating too. In 2005, biologists from the
U.S. Minerals Management Service found polar bears drowned in the waters off Alaska,
apparent victims of the disappearing ice. In 2006, U.S. Geological Survey Alaska
Science Center researchers found polar bears killing and eating each other in
areas where sea ice failed to form that year, leaving the bears bereft of food.
In response, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural
Resources revised their Red List for polar bearsupgrading them from conservation
dependent to vulnerable. In February, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service announced it would begin reviewing whether polar bears need protection
under the Endangered Species Act.
Since my report, the leaders of two influential
commissionsthe Pew Oceans Commission and the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policygave
Congress, the Bush administration, and our nations governors a D+
grade for not moving quickly enough to address their recommendations for restoring
health to our nations oceans.
Most of these stories remain out of
view, sunk with cement boots in the backwaters of scientific journals. The media
remains unable to discern good science from bad, and gives equal credence to both,
when they give any at all. The story of our declining ocean world, and our own
future, develops beyond the ken of the public, who forge ahead without altering
behavior or goals, and unimpeded by foresight.