Acidification. The increasing levels of carbon dioxide CO₂ in the atmosphere are leading to ocean acidification, and this is altering the chemical content of marine water and is endangering life in the oceans. The examples of marine zooplankton, including Copepods, Pteropods, krill, and larvae of invertebrates are essential to the pelagic food webs and carbon cycles, even though they differ in their tolerance to low PH concentration and high pCO₂ levels. Early developmental phases are particularly vulnerable, with them showing retardation in developmental stages, reduced hatch rates, physical deformities as well as a lack of calcification. Higher carbon dioxide CO₂ levels interfere with the acid-base balance, increase oxidative stress and alter the allocation of metabolism, leading to trade-offs that lower growth, reproduction and survival rates. Calcifying organisms such as the pteropods are highly susceptible whereas some of the non-calcifying copepods exhibit a level of physiological resilience. Negative effects of other stressors may be affected by increased temperature, oxygen depletion, and nutrient enrichment which may further compound negative effects. There is some evidence that there is some possible acclimation in the short term and that there might be transgenerational plasticity but we do not understand adaptive capacity in the long term. Knowledge gaps exist in regard to multigenerational response, non-calcifying and gelatinous species and how physiological plasticity occurs. Species-specific responses are an important aspect of predictive models to estimate the impact of the ecosystem and guide conservation efforts. To ensure marine ecosystems remain stable as ocean acidification continues, vulnerable zooplankton should be safeguarded to preserve tropic structure, nutrient cycling, and nutrient stability.
Continue reading ‘Impacts of ocean acidification on marine zooplankton: a review of physiological, developmental, and reproductive responses’Impacts of ocean acidification on marine zooplankton: a review of physiological, developmental, and reproductive responses
Published 31 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: adaptation, biological response, otherprocess, physiology, reproduction, review, zooplankton
Millennial-scale changes in marine lithofacies during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum: a deep-time analog for Anthropocene hydrologic and acidification impacts
Published 30 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: chemistry, field, paleo
Highlights
- Global marine sediment changes during the PETM were quantitatively reconstructed.
- Sediment changes controlled by sea level and latitudinal hydrology.
- Acidification influenced pelagic sediment composition, especially in the Atlantic.
- Carbonate “overshoot” occurred during the PETM recovery.
Abstract
Extreme climatic events can significantly alter marine lithofacies. However, global oceanic sediment patterns during deep-time hyperthermal events, which are potential analogues for the hydrologic and climatic impacts of modern anthropogenic warming, remain poorly constrained. Here, we compile 162 marine stratigraphic records to track millennial-scale sediment dynamics during the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). We find that sedimentation was primarily controlled by hydrologic intensification (resulting in ∼36% carbonate platform demise), eustatic fluctuations (resulting in ∼52% siliciclastic shelf retrogradation), and ocean acidification (resulting in ∼41% deep-sea calcareous sediment replacement). Lithofacies changes along continental margins show distinct latitudinal zonation, reflecting variations in hydrologic intensity and carbonate productivity. The impact of eustatic sea-level change is strongest in region where hydrologic effects are muted. Deep-sea acidification was widespread, with the strongest expression in the Atlantic, and weaker effects in the Pacific and Indian oceans. Widespread carbonate “overshoot” following PETM recovery suggests enhanced continental weathering. This study implies that ongoing anthropogenic warming could rapidly reorganize marine sedimentation through intensified hydrological cycle, accelerated sea-level rise, and ocean acidification on centennial timescales, much faster than during the PETM and potentially with greater magnitude.
Continue reading ‘Millennial-scale changes in marine lithofacies during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum: a deep-time analog for Anthropocene hydrologic and acidification impacts’State of the global climate 2025
Published 30 March 2026 Newsletters and reports Leave a CommentTags: chemistry, policy, review
The temperature of the Earth changes in response to the rate at which energy enters and leaves the Earth system. Increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere such as carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide, all of which reached their highest level in 800 000 years in 2024 (the last year for which we have consolidated global figures), reduce the rate at which energy leaves the Earth system. This imbalance – the Earth’s energy imbalance, a new indicator in this year’s report – leads to an accumulation of excess energy.
One of the longest observational records of climate change is that of global mean near-surface temperature. The past three years are the three warmest years in the 176-year combined land and ocean observational record. The year 2025 is the second or third warmest year, depending on the dataset used, slightly cooler than the record warmth of 2024, due in part to the transition from El Niño at the start of 2024 to La Niña in 2025. The warming seen at the surface and throughout the troposphere represents just 1% of the excess energy trapped by greenhouse gases.
The vast majority of the excess energy – around 91% – has been absorbed by the ocean in the form of heat. Ocean heat content reached a new record high in 2025, reflecting the continued increase in energy.
Another 3% of the excess energy warms and melts ice. In a global set of reference glaciers with long-term measurements, eight of the ten most negative annual glacier mass balances since 1950 have occurred since 2016. The ice sheets on Antarctica and Greenland have both lost significant mass since satellite records began.
The extent of sea ice in the Arctic has decreased in all seasons since satellite measurements began in 1979, and the annual maximum extent in 2025 was the lowest or second lowest in the observed records. Sea-ice extent around Antarctica showed a small long-term increase until 2015, but since then, extents throughout the annual cycle have dropped considerably, and the past four years have seen the four lowest Antarctic sea-ice minima on record.
The warming ocean and melting of ice on land from glaciers and ice sheets have both contributed to the long-term rise in global mean sea level. The rate of global sea-level rise has increased since satellite measurements began in 1993.
The remaining ~5% of the excess energy is stored in the continents, increasing the temperature of the land mass and thereby affecting terrestrial processes.
As well as absorbing the majority of the energy trapped by increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases, the ocean has also absorbed around 29% of the anthropogenic emissions of carbon dioxide in the past decade. While this helps to buffer the effects of climate change, it also alters the chemical composition of the ocean water, reducing the pH in a process known as ocean acidification.
These rapid large-scale changes in the Earth system have cascading impacts on human and natural systems, contributing to food insecurity and displacement where hazards intersect with high vulnerability and limited adaptive capacity.
Continue reading ‘State of the global climate 2025’Metabolic rate measurements of two benthic invertebrates under simulated climate change conditions
Published 30 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: adaptation, biological response, laboratory, Mediterranean, mollusks, morphology, multiple factors, otherprocess, porifera, respiration, temperature
Abstract
Background
Climate change is profoundly altering marine ecosystems through ocean warming and acidification. These stressors are especially pronounced in the Mediterranean Sea, a climate change hotspot projected to warm faster than the global average. Increased temperatures and reduced pH directly affect metabolic processes in marine invertebrates by elevating respiration rates up to species-specific thermal limits, beyond which physiological performance declines. Ocean acidification further disrupts metabolic processes by increasing energetic maintenance costs. Sessile and sedentary marine invertebrates, such as sponges and benthic gastropods, are particularly exposed to such environmental shifts due to their limited ability to escape unfavorable conditions, making physiological plasticity and local adaptation crucial for persistence.
New information
This manuscript presents a dataset of oxygen consumption rates and wet weight measurements for two low-mobility marine species, the gastropod Hexaplex trunculus and the sponge Chondrilla nucula. Using a common garden experiment, individuals from North and South Aegean populations were exposed for three months to simulated climate change conditions combining increased temperature and reduced pH. The dataset documents respiration measurements obtained using metabolic chambers after three months of exposure, allowing comparisons across species, geographic origin, and experimental treatments.The dataset accounts for intraspecific variation in these responses, providing insight into potential adaptive differences among geographically distinct populations. These data provide a resource for future analyses of metabolic responses of marine invertebrates to combined warming and acidification conditions.
Continue reading ‘Metabolic rate measurements of two benthic invertebrates under simulated climate change conditions’Ocean acidification and blue food security: mapping two overlapping regime complexes
Published 27 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: fisheries, policy, socio-economy
The dual challenges of blue food security and ocean acidification (OA) have become increasingly urgent concerns for global sustainability. Blue foods, which provide key nutrients, are threatened by OA, posing risks to biodiversity, fisheries, and the livelihoods of communities that depend on them. The pressure of OA highlights the urgency of addressing blue food security through the lens of OA. Understanding the governance landscape that shapes responses is crucial, yet existing literature has largely considered the OA and blue food security regimes separately. This paper analyzes whether and how the international governance of OA and blue food security intersect by mapping their regime complexes. The central research question investigates how international regimes interact in governing this nexus. The analysis finds that the two regime complexes overlap in many areas, including fisheries/marine resources and climate change. Although many actors and instruments mention both topics, significant governance fragmentation persists. Case studies on the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) reveal that neither institution provides a comprehensive framework for governing the nexus of OA and blue food security resilience. The FAO lacks an explicit mandate for OA governance. If mentioned, OA is relegated to a list of stressors. The UNFCCC addresses OA only indirectly through CO2 mitigation efforts, and its instruments, while referencing food production, generally do not link it explicitly to OA. This results in fragmented authority, unclear responsibility, and limited integration across policy domains. Furthermore, a discrepancy exists where blue food security is recognized as a topic of legal and political urgency, while OA often only gains scientific attention. We conclude that further joint integration of OA and blue food security in legal and policy frameworks is necessary to enhance coherence and coordination across these regimes.
Continue reading ‘Ocean acidification and blue food security: mapping two overlapping regime complexes’Skeletal growth and loss of the cold-water coral Lophelia pertusa from multiple environmental drivers in a year-long experiment
Published 27 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: biological response, corals, dissolution, growth, laboratory, morphology, mortality, multiple factors, North Atlantic, oxygen, physiology, respiration, temperature
Colony-forming scleractinian cold-water corals (CWCs) are important ecosystem engineers, forming complex 3-dimensional habitats in the deep sea, which in turn sustain high biodiversity. They are threatened by future environmental changes such as ocean acidification, warming, deoxygenation, and food limitation, but little is known about the effect of these drivers in combination or on the long-term. We conducted a year-long aquarium experiment with Lophelia pertusa (syn. Desmophyllum pertusum) under projected end-of-century conditions, investigating the combined effect of differences in pH (8.1 and 7.7), temperature (9°C and 12°C), oxygen concentration (100% and 90%) and food supply (100% and 60%) on coral survival, growth, respiration rates, skeletal dissolution and energetic reserves. Growth rates of L. pertusa decreased significantly in both multiple driver treatments, resulting in negative and more variable growth rates. However, growth rates only started to decrease after 4.5 months, clearly showing a delayed response. In addition, survival rates and energetic reserves were slightly lower in multiple driver treatments, whereas L. pertusa was not affected by reduced oxygen concentration examined as a single factor. Negative growth rates in multiple driver treatments were driven by dissolution of bare skeletal parts due to reduced seawater pH and temporary aragonite undersaturation, visualised here through micro-computed tomography images. While live CWCs may be able to cope with projected future environmental changes over the timescale of 1 year, ocean acidification will lead to dissolution of the dead skeletal framework of CWC reefs and net loss, reducing the complexity and associated biodiversity of these reefs. However, the challenge remains in closing the gap between long-term experiments and the much longer-term chronic exposure of CWCs to projected environmental changes.
Continue reading ‘Skeletal growth and loss of the cold-water coral Lophelia pertusa from multiple environmental drivers in a year-long experiment’Individual foraminiferal analysis: a promising tool for high-resolution temperature and pH reconstruction
Published 27 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: biogeochemistry, biological response, chemistry, field, methods, paleo, protists
Compared with traditional bulk foraminiferal analysis methods, in situ analysis of individual foraminiferal tests (individual foraminiferal analysis or IFA) offers several advantages over traditional bulk methods, including enhanced temporal resolution where fossiliferous sample material is limited as well as potentially resolving seasonal-scale climate variability in deep time. Despite these advantages, applications of element-to‑calcium (El/Ca) ratios and δ11B in benthic foraminifera using IFA remain limited, and the biogeochemical drivers of intra-test and inter-test geochemical variability are poorly constrained. In this study, we systematically evaluate El/Ca ratios and δ11B in individual benthic foraminifera. By analysing Holocene epifaunal benthic foraminiferal species Cibicidoides wuellerstorfi from a deep ocean core site (ODP Site 999), we conclude that intra- and inter-test variabilities are regulated by ontogenetic effects resulting in inter-test variabilities of ±0.14 mmol/mol Mg/Ca, ± 14 μmol/mol B/Ca, and ± 0.18 ‰ δ11B. Application of the IFA method to epifaunal benthic foraminifera species Cibicides lobatulus from a box core in the English Channel, UK reveals ~0.1 pH units acidification and ~ 1 °C warming since the mid-19th century. By demonstrating that individual-level variability in reconstructed temperature and pH tracks seasonal trends in the available contemporaneous water-column instrumental measurements at the same site, we provide a ground-truthing to our multi-proxy IFA methodology, and also demonstrate the potential for benthic IFA to provide seasonal-scale reconstructions of ocean climate over hundreds to millions of years.
Continue reading ‘Individual foraminiferal analysis: a promising tool for high-resolution temperature and pH reconstruction’Tolerance to future elevated CO2 conditions in sablefish (Anoplopoma fimbria), a deep-water benthic dwelling fish species
Published 26 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: biological response, fish, laboratory, molecular biology, North Pacific, performance, physiology
Numerous studies have found that elevated CO2 levels in marine waters induced significant physiological and behavioral effects in fish. In an earlier study of coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch), we observed that elevated CO2 exposure impaired signaling in the olfactory bulb, through a mechanism likely involving interference of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) signaling. However, the effects of elevated CO2 may be species-specific, and there have been few studies addressing the effects of elevated CO2 on benthic fish. In the current study, we investigated the effects of elevated CO2 exposures on the deep-water benthic species, sablefish (Anoplopoma fimbria). Sablefish were exposed to three different levels of CO2 (700, 1600 and 2700 µatm) for two weeks, followed by behavioral, neurophysiological and gene expression analysis of the olfactory system. Analysis of behaviors mediated by food odors, including swimming activity and food strikes did not differ between fish maintained under elevated or control CO2 conditions. Similarly, electro-olfactogram recordings of odorant signaling did not differ among treatment and controls. mRNA expression patterns of olfactory bulb genes that were altered in coho salmon exposed to elevated CO2 levels, were similarly examined in sablefish. Sablefish mRNAs encoding genes involved in GABA-mediated olfactory bulb signaling were generally unaffected by high CO2, but aldh9a1, an enzyme involved in the synthesis of GABA, was elevated by high CO2. The results of our study contrast other studies demonstrating adverse effects of elevated CO2 in pelagic fish, but support differences among fish species to susceptibility to elevated CO2, potentially associated with life history traits.
Continue reading ‘Tolerance to future elevated CO2 conditions in sablefish (Anoplopoma fimbria), a deep-water benthic dwelling fish species’Resilient adults but vulnerable larvae: demographic pathways of chiton decline under ocean acidification
Published 26 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: abundance, algae, biological response, BRcommunity, chemistry, field, laboratory, mollusks, morphology, mortality, North Pacific, otherprocess, phytoplankton, reproduction, vents

Highlights
- Natural CO₂ seep systems showed reduced intertidal chiton abundance.
- Adult chitons showed resilience to acidification in field and lab experiments.
- Larval survival and recruitment were strongly impaired under acidified seawater.
- Population declines are linked to early life-stage vulnerability.
- Loss of chitons may reduce grazing and bulldozing, reshaping intertidal communities.
Abstract
Ocean acidification (OA) is a major threat to marine calcifiers; however, the sensitivity across taxa and life stages remains elusive. In this study, we combined field surveys of natural CO₂ seeps with laboratory exposure, transplantation, and larval settlement experiments to assess the effect of OA on chitons, a group of calcifying grazers and bulldozers that play critical roles in the structure of rocky intertidal ecosystems. Field surveys revealed approximately 98.6% reduction in chiton (Acanthopleura loochooana, Liolophura japonica, and Acanthochitona rubrolineata) abundance at acidified habitats (pH 7.6), despite greater microalgal food availability and no detectable increase in predator abundance. Laboratory CO₂-exposure experiments showed no direct effect of OA on adult A. loochooana survival, which is consistent with the presence of protective structural features in the valves that confer resistance to dissolution. Transplant experiments revealed no evidence of increased adult A. loochooana mortality in the acidified habitats (pH 7.6). In contrast, larvae showed pronounced sensitivity to OA, with acidified seawater (pH 7.6) reducing larval settlement by approximately 81.5% compared to control conditions (pH 8.1); early life stages were the most vulnerable. These findings suggest that OA-associated decline in chiton abundance is mainly mediated by impaired recruitment rather than by direct adult mortality, predation, or food limitation. Given the role of chitons as grazers and bulldozers, their loss could substantially change intertidal community dynamics by decreasing grazing pressure and disturbing algal and microbial assemblages. Our findings underscore the criticality of considering life-stage vulnerability and ecological function when evaluating the ecosystem-level consequences of OA.
Continue reading ‘Resilient adults but vulnerable larvae: demographic pathways of chiton decline under ocean acidification’The role of seagrass in modifying dissolved oxygen and pH in coastal systems: a meta-analysis
Published 26 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: biological response, chemistry, field, phanerogams, review
Highlights
- Seagrass productivity drives diel pH–DO variation, enhancing local buffering capacity
- Oxygen–pH coupling highlights seagrass role in mitigating acidification during photosynthesis
- Studies should integrate temperature, salinity, and light to parse biological drivers
- Expanded geographic scope, especially tropics and Global South, is urgently needed
- Standardized pH scales and advanced sensors to improve comparability and monitoring
Abstract
Seagrass meadows, highly productive ecosystems, can influence local water chemistry by increasing dissolved oxygen in the water column and removing dissolved CO2 thus raising pH. This study provides the first quantitative synthesis of literature comparing pH and dissolved oxygen (DO) between systems with and without seagrasses. Through a systematic literature review and meta-analysis, we collated and analysed data from 63 studies reporting pH values and 70 studies reporting DO. Across studies, seagrass habitats were associated with slightly higher mean pH relative to non-seagrass habitats. Seagrass habitats showed the highest mean pH (8.11 ± 0.30) and the greatest diel variability (0.47 ± 0.65) of all habitats investigated with unvegetated areas exhibiting lower mean pH and reduced variability. The diel pH range was also significantly higher in seagrass habitats (p = 0.024). The pooled standardized mean difference was small (0.15), indicating a modest overall effect of seagrass presence on pH across studies. Although mean DO concentrations were slightly lower in seagrass habitats compared to other vegetated systems, they experienced fewer hypoxic events (12% of values < 2 mg/L) compared to other vegetated systems (55%). Generalized additive models identified DO as the strongest predictor of pH, with minor contributions from temperature and salinity. Overall, seagrass habitats are associated with increasing average pH and reducing hypoxia across multiple sites and regions. However, the magnitude and direction of effects vary widely among studies (I2 = 97%). These findings indicate that seagrass influences on water chemistry are context-dependent and likely driven by interactions among biological processes and local environmental conditions. Key knowledge gaps were identified; including the need for a greater focus on H+ concentration and the need for more research on seagrass ecosystems in underrepresented geographical regions.
Continue reading ‘The role of seagrass in modifying dissolved oxygen and pH in coastal systems: a meta-analysis’Characteristics of meiofaunal community in the subtidal zone near Hupo, anticipating ocean acidification on the coast of Korea
Published 25 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: abundance, biological response, chemistry, community composition, crustaceans, field, nematodes, North Pacific, otherprocess, zooplankton
This study aimed to investigate the meiofauna community characteristics in coastal waters affected by ocean acidification. Therefore, the meiofauna communities in the coastal waters of Hupo in Uljin-gun, which showed a high ocean acidification trend in the integrated data on the coastal areas of South Korea for the previous ten years, were monitored over five years. During the study period, the mean abundance of total meiofauna communities expressed in population density was 614 individuals (Inds.)/10 cm2. The most dominant taxa were nematodes (65–70%) and harpacticoids (7–20%); these two taxa accounted for approximately 80% of the total meiofauna abundance. Station (St.) 5 and 10, which had the lowest seawater pH values, showed the lowest average abundance values for harpacticoids (average 46 Inds./10 cm2) and nauplius (average 4 Inds./10 cm2) among the major meiofaunal groups over the 5-year period. In addition, St. 5 indicated the lowest meiofaunal diversity index of 0.54. To examine the effect of ocean acidification on meiofauna communities at the species level, species of nematodes, the most dominant taxon, were analyzed. The results indicated that the number of nematode species at St. 10, one of the two stations with the lowest pH, was the lowest compared to those at other stations. Analysis of c-p values for nematode species showed that both species sensitive to environmental disturbance and species resistant to environmental pollution appeared at high rates. According to the feeding type of nematodes, epistrate feeders accounted for a remarkably high proportion at St. 10. This study provides various data on meiofauna community characteristics to understand the effects of ocean acidification on coastal ecosystems.
Continue reading ‘Characteristics of meiofaunal community in the subtidal zone near Hupo, anticipating ocean acidification on the coast of Korea’CO2 rise modulates the physiological performance of the diatoms Thalassiosira pseudonana and Thalassiosira weissflogii to light challenge
Published 25 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: biological response, growth, laboratory, physiology, phytoplankton

Highlights
- Ocean acidification boosts diatom growth independent of CO2 ramping speed.
- Acidification changed PSII repair and photoprotection strategies under high light.
- Species-specific adaptive advantages altered in acidified, light-variable oceans.
Abstract
Diatoms are major contributors to marine primary productivity and typically dominate well-mixed coastal environments characterized by rapidly fluctuating light levels. Yet, how the ongoing ocean acidification (OA) caused by rising CO2 affects their capacity to exploit such variable light is not well known. In this study, the diatoms Thalassiosira pseudonana and Thalassiosira weissflogii were cultured under two CO2 acidification regimes (gradual increase from ambient 400 to 1000 ppmV in ∼200 ppmV increments vs. direct elevation from 400 to 1000 ppmV) and exposed to high light stress to assess comparative physiological responses. Both diatoms showed significant increases in maximum electron transfer rate and saturation light intensity, with T. weissflogii additionally exhibiting elevated PsbA and Rubisco content. Growth rates increased by 15 % and 27 % for T. pseudonana and T. weissflogii respectively, with no significant difference between direct versus gradual CO2 elevation treatments. T. pseudonana demonstrated higher intrinsic susceptibility to PSII photoinhibition than T. weissflogii, OA didn’t significantly alter the functional absorption cross-section for PSII photoinactivation in either species. Notably, OA decreased PSII repair rates in T. pseudonana, while T. weissflogii maintained repair capacity through increased PsbA content and sustained non-photochemical quenching. These findings suggest T. weissflogii may gain a competitive advantage in future acidified, light-variable oceans due to its enhanced photoprotection and PSII repair capacity, highlighting species-specific resilience to combined environmental stresses.
Continue reading ‘CO2 rise modulates the physiological performance of the diatoms Thalassiosira pseudonana and Thalassiosira weissflogii to light challenge’Analysing the distribution and variability of dissolved inorganic carbon and alkalinity over the Bay of Bengal region using the coupled ocean biogeochemical modeling
Published 25 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: chemistry, Indian, modeling, regionalmodeling
Highlights
- High-resolution regional coupled ocean biogeochemical modeling in the Bay of Bengal.
- Spatio-temporal variability of Dissolved Inorganic Carbon and Alkalinity is studied.
- Aragonite (calcite) saturation depth in the Bay of Bengal is estimated.
- ENSO and IOD events significantly influence surface DIC of the BoB region.
Abstract
A prototype high-resolution regional coupled ocean biogeochemical modeling experiment is carried out in the Bay of Bengal (BoB) region to study the distribution and spatio-temporal variability of Dissolved Inorganic Carbon (DIC) and Alkalinity (Alk) during the period 2000-2021. It is found that in the eastern as well as head BoB, the DIC concentration remains less (1.6-1.7 mol/m3) as compared to the south-west and west-central BoB, where the DIC concentration remains particularly high (>1.9 mol/m3). The highest (lowest) DIC concentration in the BoB remains in the Mar-April (Oct) months. The seasonal variability of the DIC and Alk is studied vis-à-vis seasonal changes in the currents and freshwater flux. The depth profiles of DIC, Alk, and DIC/Alk ratio are also investigated across different sections in the BoB. The DIC remains stratified in the BoB, and the stratification becomes much more pronounced on moving from south to north (and west to east) part of the model domain. The aragonite (calcite) saturation depth ranges between approx. 100-400 m (500-4000 m) in the BoB. The particularly high (>8.1) and low (∼8) pH values are found in the head BoB and southwest BoB, respectively. It is shown that the influence of El Nino – Southern Oscillation (ENSO) event on the surface DIC concentration over the BoB region is much stronger as compared to the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) event.
Continue reading ‘Analysing the distribution and variability of dissolved inorganic carbon and alkalinity over the Bay of Bengal region using the coupled ocean biogeochemical modeling’Diel variability and decoupled pH-oxygen dynamics drive metabolic plasticity in kelp crabs from an upwelling seascape
Published 25 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: biological response, chemistry, crustaceans, laboratory, multiple factors, oxygen, physiology, respiration, South Pacific
Coastal upwelling zones, shaped by global change and human impacts, naturally impose hypoxia and acidification on marine species, creating selective pressures that influence physiological responses and drive phenotypic variability. Understanding these responses is crucial for predicting marine biodiversity dynamics in heterogeneous seascapes. We explored diel cycles of pH and dissolved oxygen (DO) and their influence on the metabolic performance of the kelp crab Taliepus dentatus, a species with limited larval dispersal. Kelp crabs from two environmentally contrasting sites along an upwelling seascape in central Chile—an upwelling shadow and an active upwelling zone—were studied using field sensor data and laboratory experiments. Active upwelling disrupted the regular diel pH cycle, resulting in persistently low pH (pHT ≈ 7.5) decoupled from oxygen dynamics. Experimental simulations of diel pH–DO fluctuations revealed that nocturnal low DO/low pH conditions (DO = 1 and 5 mg l⁻¹; pH = 7.5 and 7.8 for ‘upwelling’ and ‘downwelling’ conditions, respectively) reduced metabolic rates and respiratory quotient in crabs. Individuals from the active upwelling zone exhibited elevated metabolic rates, haemolymph pH and lactate accumulation under extremely low pH/low DO conditions compared with those from the upwelling shadow, suggesting site-specific physiological adjustments. These findings underscore the importance of incorporating natural variability into experimental designs and management frameworks aimed at predicting species resilience under climate change.
Continue reading ‘Diel variability and decoupled pH-oxygen dynamics drive metabolic plasticity in kelp crabs from an upwelling seascape’The Ocean in a High-Co2 World: registration open and abstracts due 1 April
Published 24 March 2026 Events Leave a Comment
Registration Is Now Open
Registration for the 6th International Symposium on the Ocean in a High-CO₂ World is now open. Workshops and field trips are scheduled to run concurrently during the symposium in addition to special and general session offerings.
We encourage delegates to review the options carefully before registering as workshops and field trips will require pre-event sign up. Some offerings have capped numbers or require an expression of interest.
Reminder: Abstract Submissions Due by: 1 April 2026
Abstract submissions remain open until 1 April 2026 (midnight, any time zone). Full details and the submission portal are available on the website.
Early acceptance may be considered for delegates with time sensitive funding needs; please email highco2@confer.co.nz with a brief explanation and ensure your abstract is submitted via the online form.
Continue reading ‘The Ocean in a High-Co2 World: registration open and abstracts due 1 April’Acidification and deoxygenation matter in assessing redistribution of global cold-water coral biodiversity induced by climate change
Published 24 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: biological response, BRcommunity, corals, globalmodeling, modeling, multiple factors, temperature
The ocean is undergoing significant changes, including warming, acidification, and deoxygenation, which pose great challenges to marine biodiversity. However, most models projecting the impacts of climate change on marine species overlook predictor variables critically meaningful for species’ ecologies such as pH and dissolved oxygen. The recent release of high-resolution projections of different future climate-change scenarios offers the opportunity to explore species redistribution under multiple threats beyond ocean warming. Accordingly, we conducted a global comparative analysis to study the impact of incorporating predictor variables describing pH and dissolved oxygen into marine species distribution models. We used models trained for 268 cold-water coral species to project potential future distributions for different climate and dispersal scenarios over different time periods. We found that, irrespective of scenario or period, models using pH and dissolved oxygen projected 11.5–21.4% higher impacts of climate change than those without them. For instance, by the end of the century under a high emission scenario, models including pH and oxygen projected an average range contraction of 48.2% for cold-water corals under a no-dispersal scenario, compared with a 26.8% contraction projected by models excluding these two predictors. Given the substantial differences in the predicted distribution patterns and the biological importance of these variables, we highlight that researchers should consider more diverse sets of predictor variables when predicting future range shifts for marine biodiversity assessments under climate change.
Continue reading ‘Acidification and deoxygenation matter in assessing redistribution of global cold-water coral biodiversity induced by climate change’Experimental exposure to climate change scenarios imposed alterations on the morphological traits of sessile and low-motility marine invertebrates
Published 24 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: biological response, laboratory, Mediterranean, methods, mollusks, morphology, multiple factors, porifera, temperature
Background
Over the past 50 years, the oceans have absorbed over 90% of global warming heat, leading to warming, acidification and declining oxygen levels that are disrupting marine ecosystems and altering species distributions and productivity. The vulnerability of marine organisms to these changes depends on their biological traits, habitat conditions and adaptive capacity, influencing their growth, behaviour and overall population health. Micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) has been previously used for studying the morphological traits of marine invertebrates, which provide important insights into species functionality and responses to climate change and ocean acidification. Micro-CT enables non-destructive, high-resolution 3D analysis of internal and external structures, allowing precise measurement of traits such as density, porosity and morphology that are valuable for climate change research.
New information
The present manuscript describes micro-CT imaging datasets generated to investigate the effects of climate change on the morphological structure of two benthic marine invertebrates: the low-motility gastropod Hexaplex trunculus (Linnaeus, 1758) and the sessile sponge Chondrilla nucula Schmidt, 1862. Both species are considered particularly vulnerable to environmental stressors. To date, no study has investigated the effects of ocean warming and acidification on sponges using micro-CT technology. Using a common garden experimental design, individuals from geographically distinct populations exposed to different natural environmental regimes were subjected to combined warming and acidification scenarios to assess their morphological responses and adaptive capacity.
Continue reading ‘Experimental exposure to climate change scenarios imposed alterations on the morphological traits of sessile and low-motility marine invertebrates’Tolerance of egg and yolk-sac larval yellowfin sole (Limanda aspera) to ocean warming and acidification
Published 23 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: biological response, fish, fisheries, growth, laboratory, morphology, mortality, multiple factors, North Pacific, physiology, reproduction, temperature
Yellowfin sole (Limanda aspera) support the largest flatfish fishery in the world and contribute substantially to the eastern Bering Sea (EBS) flatfish catch. The EBS has been warming and acidifying, trends that are expected to intensify into the future. Sustainable management of yellowfin sole requires an understanding of how yellowfin sole respond to environmental change, which can be assessed through controlled laboratory investigations. Across four independent trials, yellowfin sole embryos and larvae were incubated at one of six experimental treatments spanning three temperatures (9°C, 12°C, and 15°C) and two pCO2 target levels (low and high), and a range of organismal and physiological responses were measured. Embryonic daily mortality rates and metabolic rates increased with increasing temperature but were not affected by ocean acidification. At- hatch and at- yolk absorption, morphometric measurements (length, dry weight, myotome height, and yolk area) were temperature- sensitive, but the response differed across the four trials. There was a consistent increase in length- based growth and yolk absorption rates with increasing temperature across trials. All morphometric and rate- based measurements were not affected by ocean acidification. Yellowfin sole metabolic enzyme activities were measured at- yolk absorption. Lactate dehydrogenase (anaerobic metabolism) and β- hydroxyacyl CoA dehydrogenase (fatty acid metabolism) both increased with increasing temperature, indicating elevated energy demand. Citrate synthase (aerobic metabolism) declined with increasing pCO2 levels, indicating potential metabolic suppression. Overall, embryonic and larval yellowfin sole demonstrated relatively high tolerance to ocean warming and acidification. We hypothesize the variation in temperature responses across the trials may be driven by maternal effects, which could support tolerance to future ocean conditions.
Continue reading ‘Tolerance of egg and yolk-sac larval yellowfin sole (Limanda aspera) to ocean warming and acidification’Long-term pH trends and spatiotemporal variability of the carbonate system in Jakarta Bay
Published 20 March 2026 Science Leave a CommentTags: biogeochemistry, chemistry, field, South Pacific
Jakarta Bay, an industrialized and densely inhabited coastal area, presents considerable environmental issues as a result of excessive organic pollution and nutrient inflow. Understanding the spatiotemporal variability of the carbonate system in such an affected bay is critical for assessing marine ecosystem health. The spatiotemporal variability of the carbonate system, pH, partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO2), total alkalinity (TAlk), and dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) was investigated in Jakarta Bay during the rainy and dry seasons of 2023. pH datasets from 2011 to 2023 were also collected from the Environmental Agency of DKI Jakarta (DLH DKI Jakarta) for trend analysis. The temporal analysis shows that during the SE monsoon, the lowest pH (mean: 8.06 ± 0.43); lowest TAlk (mean: 2099 ± 340 µmol kg-1); highest pCO2 (mean: 879 ± 1177 µatm); and highest DIC (mean: 2068 ± 806 µmol kg-1) were observed. The pH distribution gradually increased from the river outlet to the outer bay; inversely, pCO2, TAlk, and DIC gradually decreased. Furthermore, from 2011 to 2023, pH in Jakarta Bay showed a slight upward tendency that was statistically insignificant, reflecting high variability and the influence of local biogeochemical processes. The carbonate system variability reflects changes in biogeochemical (Chl-a, DO and nutrients) and physical (SST and Sal) parameters. In addition, the semi-enclosed hydrodynamic properties, together with the influence of human activities, including a continuous supply of nutrients and organic materials from the mainland through the incoming rivers, further affected the balance of the carbonate system in the bay.
Continue reading ‘Long-term pH trends and spatiotemporal variability of the carbonate system in Jakarta Bay’


