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		US oyster, clam farms face economic blow 
		from acidification: study 
		
		 
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		[February 24, 2015] 
		By Alister Doyle 
		  
		 OSLO (Reuters) - U.S. shellfish producers 
		in the Northeast and the Gulf of Mexico will be most vulnerable to an 
		acidification of the oceans linked to climate change that makes it 
		harder for clams and oysters to build shells, a study said on Monday. 
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			 The report said the two regions would be more at risk in coming 
			decades than the Pacific Northwest, which had previously suffered 
			the most from the problem, with losses to the oyster industry 
			estimated at $110 million, putting 3,200 jobs at risk. 
			 
			Carbon dioxide, emitted into the atmosphere by mankind's burning of 
			fossil fuels, gets absorbed by the oceans where it forms a weak 
			acid. That undermines the ability of creatures from corals to 
			lobsters to grow protective shells. 
			 
			In the first study of acidification on shellfish producers 
			nationwide, the scientists found that: "the most socially vulnerable 
			communities are spread along the U.S. East Coast and Gulf of 
			Mexico." 
			 
			The scientists - in the United States, France, Australia and the 
			Netherlands - examined ocean acidification as well as factors 
			including rivers, which can aggravate acidification with pollution, 
			opportunities for shellfish workers to find new jobs if needed and 
			local research into more resilient molluscs. 
			  
			
			  
			 
			Along the East Coast, southern Massachusetts was extremely 
			vulnerable, for instance, because of a heavy economic reliance on 
			shellfish, they wrote in the journal Nature Climate Change. 
			 
			Places including Hawaii or Florida were least likely to be affected 
			by acidification this century, it said. Cool waters are most at 
			risk. 
			 
			Still, producers in the warm water Gulf of Mexico were at risk - 
			partly because of dependence on a single species, the eastern 
			oyster. 
			 
			U.S. fish farmers produced oysters worth $136 million and clams 
			worth $99 million in 2012, according to the U.S. National Oceanic 
			and Atmospheric Administration. 
			 
			
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			Taking ocean acidification in isolation from factors like river 
			pollution, the study said the Pacific Northwest and Alaska were 
			"expected to be exposed soonest ... now or in coming decades". 
			 
			An international study in 2013 said acidification was happening at 
			the fastest pace in 55 million years. 
			 
			Hans-Otto Poertner, an oceans expert and professor at the Alfred 
			Wegener Institute not involved in Monday's study, said breeding can 
			develop varieties of shellfish resistant to acidification. 
			 
			Acidification places an additional level of stress on wildlife 
			beyond that from warmer temperatures. "Warming of the oceans itself 
			can be a problem for many organisms," he said. 
			 
			Report available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nclimate2508 
			 
			(Reporting By Alister Doyle; Editing by Christian Plumb) 
			[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] 
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