Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
International

Global warming leads to oxygen depletion in oceans

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Oct, 2014 10:53 AM
    A study to track oxygen levels in global oceans has revealed that the oxygen levels in oceans have come down due to global warming.
     
    By combining chemical analyses with micropaleontology - the study of tiny fossilized organisms - researchers have tried to better understand how global marine life was affected by a rapid warming event more than 55 million years ago.
     
    "Global warming impacts marine life in complex ways, of which the loss of dissolved oxygen (a condition known as hypoxia) is a growing concern" said Zunli Lu, assistant professor of earth sciences from the Syracuse University, New York in the US.
     
    By analyzing the iodine-to-calcium ratios in microfossils, the study could estimate the oxygen levels of ambient sea water, where micro-organisms once lived.
     
    "It is difficult to predict future deoxygenation that is induced by carbon emissions, without a good understanding of our geologic past," added Zunli Lu.
     
    This type of deoxygenation leads to larger and thicker oxygen minimum zones (OMZs) in the world's oceans, found the study.
     
    An OMZ is the layer of water in an ocean where oxygen saturation is at its lowest.
     
    "By comparing our fossil data with oxygen levels simulated in climate models, we think OMZs were much more prevalent 55 million years ago than they are today," Zunli said.
     
    Lu's work is centred around Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), a well studied analogue for modern climate warming.
     
    Deoxygenation, along with warming and acidification, had a dramatic effect on marine life during the PETM, prompting mass extinction on the seafloor, concluded Zunli.
     
    Their findings appeared in the journal Paleoceanography.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    US military women less likely to drink than civilians: Study

    US military women less likely to drink than civilians: Study
    A survey of US military veterans has revealed that female veterans are actually less likely to drink than their civilian counterparts...

    US military women less likely to drink than civilians: Study

    McDonald's Japan to import chicken from Brazil

    McDonald's Japan to import chicken from Brazil
    McDonald's Japan will import chicken from Brazil after withdrawing all poultry products of Chinese origin following the Husi company rotten meat scandal...

    McDonald's Japan to import chicken from Brazil

    Kerry visit a start, Modi visit to US pivotal

    Kerry visit a start, Modi visit to US pivotal
    John Kerry visits India Wednesday as a raft of crises consume American diplomacy. By contrast, US-India relations are at a moment of opportunity, but the US Secretary...

    Kerry visit a start, Modi visit to US pivotal

    EU to impose more restrictive measures against Russia

    EU to impose more restrictive measures against Russia
    The European Union (EU) has agreed a package of "significant" additional restrictive measures targeting sectoral cooperation and exchanges with Russia...

    EU to impose more restrictive measures against Russia

    Obama writes to Putin over missile treaty violation

    Obama writes to Putin over missile treaty violation
    US President Barack Obama has written to his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin over Moscow's breach of a 1987 missile treaty, the White House said Tuesday....

    Obama writes to Putin over missile treaty violation

    Drinking water shortage to hit world by 2040

    Drinking water shortage to hit world by 2040
    If we continue doing what we are doing today to meet our energy demands, there will not be enough water in the world to quench the thirst of the world population by 2040...

    Drinking water shortage to hit world by 2040