Ocean acidification (OA) research seeks to understand how marine ecosystems and global elemental cycles will respond to changes in seawater carbonate chemistry in combination with other environmental perturbations such as warming, eutrophication, and deoxygenation. This paper discusses the effectiveness and limitations of current research approaches used to address this goal. A diverse combination of approaches is essential to decipher the consequences of OA for marine organisms, communities, and ecosystems. The benefits and limitations of each approach must be considered carefully. Major research challenges involve experimentally addressing the effects of OA in the context of large natural variability in seawater carbonate system parameters and other interactive variables, integrating the results from different research approaches, and scaling results across different temporal and spatial scales.

PDF: Understanding-Ocean-Acidification-Impacts-on-Organismal-to-Ecological-Scales.pdf

Author(s): Andersson, A.J., D.I. Kline, P.J. Edmunds, S.D. Archer, N. Bednaršek, R.C. Carpenter, M. Chadsey, P. Goldstein, A.G. Grottoli, T.P. Hurst, and others

Date: 2015

Link: https://tos.org/oceanography/article/understanding-ocean-acidification-impacts-on-organismal-to-ecologicalscales

Overview:
Scientific Literature

Additional Topics:
Ecosystem
Multiple stressors

Geographic Areas:
Global
Gulf of Maine
Northeast U.S.

Marine Life:
Other

Parameters:
Carbonate chemistry