Man-made carbon
dioxide, released into the air by burning fossil fuels, forms a
weak acid when mixed with water that can harm marine life in
what is likely to be a worsening effect of global warming this
century.
Fish adjust their bodies every day because levels of carbon
dioxide naturally in the seas peak at night and dip during
sunlight hours when algae, seaweed and other plants absorb
carbon dioxide to generate energy.
The study of spiny damselfish, a small species from Australia's
Great Barrier Reef, found that those best able to tackle high
carbon levels in the water produced offspring with flexible body
clocks that helped adapt to acidification.
"It seems the tolerant offspring may have adjusted their
circadian clocks as if it was always night," Timothy Ravasi, one
of the authors at King Abdullah University of Science and
Technology in Saudi Arabia, wrote of the findings published in
the journal Nature Climate Change.
The scientists reared the grey and white damsel fish in water
with levels of carbon dioxide comparable to those predicted for
coming decades and examined changes in genes and proteins in
their brains.
Philip Munday, another of the authors at James Cook University
in Australia, told Reuters the findings were "potentially good
news" by pointing to ways that fish can adapt to acidification.
But he said the scientists needed more study to see how far
beneficial genes can be inherited. And there are also many other
damaging factors linked to climate change, such as rising ocean
temperatures that can stop some fish from breeding.
In 2014, the U.N. panel of climate scientists said that "ocean
acidification poses substantial risks to marine ecosystems" if
man-made greenhouse gas emissions rise at medium to high levels
this century.
Acidification makes it harder for creatures such as scallops or
lobsters to grow their protective shells. Other studies have
found it can also disrupt the behavior of fish, from sharks to
salmon.
(Reporting By Alister Doyle; Editing by Richard Balmforth)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|
|