Arctic Ocean acidification worse than previously expected

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This pteropod, or ’sea butterfly’, a type of marine snail, shows dam
This pteropod, or ’sea butterfly’, a type of marine snail, shows damage to its shell (jagged line radiating from center) due to acidic ocean waters. © National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA
This pteropod, or 'sea butterfly', a type of marine snail, shows damage to its shell (jagged line radiating from center) due to acidic ocean waters. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA - The Arctic Ocean will take up more CO2 over the 21st century than predicted by most climate models. This additional CO2 causes a distinctly stronger ocean acidification. These results were published in a study by climate scientists from the University of Bern and École normale supérieure in Paris. Ocean acidification threatens the life of calcifying organisms - such as mussels and "sea butterflies" - and can have serious consequences for the entire food chain. The ocean takes up large amounts of man-made CO2 from the atmosphere. This additional CO2 causes ocean acidification, a process that can already be observed today.
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