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The shallow waters of Alaska's broad continental shelves also retain more carbon dioxide because there is less mixing from deeper ocean waters. Another contributor is the rich biological life of Alaska waters, from tiny plankton to humpback whales. All use oxygen and emit CO2. Mathis and other scientists call it the "biological pump." Phytoplankton, like other plant life, absorbs CO2 and gives off oxygen, but when it dies and sinks in the shallow Alaska waters, decomposes and adds carbon to the water column. Mathis has been warning fisheries managers around the state of ocean acidification. He has been hearing back of salmon returns with fewer, smaller fish reaching streams. "We can't correlate that yet to ocean acidification or any climate process," he said. "We cannot make those connections yet but there's indications in the ecosystem that the ecosystems are stressed." He said there should be a twofold course of action: increasing studies and observation of the effects of ocean acidification, and reducing carbon emissions. A future study will look at the physiological impact of acidification on one of Alaska's money fish, pollock. A graduate student will rear pollock from hatch and study them in the larval and juvenile stages under different acidified conditions, looking for decreases in body mass, increases in stress hormones and other physiological indicators.
Pollock is the largest U.S. fishery by volume. Annual catches average 2.5 billion pounds and provide raw material for fish sticks and fast food fish sandwiches. Ocean acidification could be a blow to commercial fishing, which accounts for 50 percent of U.S. seafood production. The Center for Biological Diversity, citing Mathis' findings, renewed its call for Alaska to declare its waters impaired under the Clean Water Act. The state last year rejected the group's first request for the declaration.
[Associated
Press;
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