Hem
Skottlands kust. (Peter Morrison / AP)

Marin värmebölja hotar djurlivet i norra Atlanten

Temperaturen i havet utanför Storbritanniens och Irlands kust är upp till fem grader högre än normalt. Nu varnar forskare för att den aldrig tidigare skådade marina värmeböljan kan orsaka massdöd bland sjögräs, fiskar och ostron, rapporterar The Guardian.

Den av människan orsakade globala uppvärmningen och naturliga klimatvariationer som El Niño anges som förklaringar till det extrema läget.

– Marina värmeböljor har förekommit i varmare vatten som Medelhavet, men så här avvikande temperaturer i den här delen av norra Atlanten har inte hänt förr, säger Daniela Schmidt, professor vid universitetet i Bristol.

bakgrund
 
Marin värmebölja
Wikipedia (en)
A marine heatwave (abbreviated as MHW) is a period of abnormally high ocean temperatures relative to the average seasonal temperature in a particular marine region. Marine heatwaves are caused by a variety of factors, including shorter term weather phenomena such as fronts, intraseasonal, annual, or decadal modes like El Niño events, and longer term changes like climate change. Marine heatwaves can lead to severe biodiversity changes such as coral bleaching, sea star wasting disease, harmful algal blooms, and mass mortality of benthic communities. Unlike heatwaves on land, marine heatwaves can extend for millions of square kilometers, persist for weeks to months or even years, and occur at subsurface levels.Major marine heatwave events such as Great Barrier Reef 2002, Mediterranean 2003, Northwest Atlantic 2012, and Northeast Pacific 2013-2016 have had drastic and long-term impacts on the oceanographic and biological conditions in those areas.The IPCC Sixth Assessment Report stated in 2022 that "marine heatwaves are more frequent [...], more intense and longer [...] since the 1980s, and since at least 2006 very likely attributable to anthropogenic climate change".: 381  This confirms earlier findings, for example in the Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate from 2019 which stated that it is "virtually certain" that the global ocean has absorbed more than 90% of the excess heat in our climate systems, the rate of ocean warming has doubled, and marine heatwave events have doubled in frequency since 1982.While marine heat waves have been studied at the sea surface for more than a decade, a 2023 paper published in the scientific journal Nature Communications details how a team led by NOAA researchers showed for the first time that these extreme events also occur at the sea floor.

Gå förbi betalväggar!

Omni Mer låser upp en mängd artiklar. En smidig lösning när du vill fördjupa dig.

Omni är politiskt obundna och oberoende. Vi strävar efter att ge fler perspektiv på nyheterna. Har du frågor eller synpunkter kring vår rapportering? Kontakta redaktionen