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Jobs Dating Games Offers Arctic Ocean acid 'will dissolve shells of sea creatures within 10 years' The Arctic Ocean is becoming acidic so quickly that it will reach corrosive levels within 10 years, a leading scientist has warned. By Matthew Moore (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/journalists/matthew-moore/) Published: 4:33PM BST 04 Oct 2009 Waters around the North Pole are absorbing carbon dioxide at such a rate that they will soon start dissolving the shells of living sea creatures. The potentially disastrous consequences for the food chain have been highlighted by Professor Jean-Pierre Gattuso of the National Centre for Scientific Research in France. Related Articles CO2 levels may cause underwater catastrophe (/earth/environment/5420048/CO2-levels-may-causeunderwater-catastrophe.html) Oceans turning acidic decades earlier (/science/science-news/3342688/Oceans-turning-acidic-decadesearlier.html) Pollution to devastate shellfish by turning seas acidic (/earth/earthnews/4968674/Pollutionto-devastate-shellfish-by-turning-seas-acidic.html) Greenhouse gases are turning oceans acidic (/earth/earthnews/3342779/Greenhouse-gases-are-turningoceans-acidic.html) Oceans becoming acidic 'at fastest rate for 65 million years' (/earth/earthnews/5232964/Oceansbecoming-acidic-at-fastest-rate-for-65-million-years.html) His team of oceanographers have produced startling predictions about the acidity of the Arctic Ocean after research carried out on the Svalbard archipelago, a group of islands half way between Norway and the North Pole, revealed that the problem is more advanced than scientists thought. Their forecasts suggest that by 2018, 10 per cent of the ocean will be corrosively acidic, rising to 50 per cent in 2050. By 2100 the entire Arctic Ocean will be inhospitable to shellfish, they predict. "This is extremely worrying," Prof Gattuso told the Oceans of Tomorrow conference in Barcelona. "We knew that the seas were getting more acidic and this would disrupt the ability of shellfish – like mussels – to grow their shells. But now we realise the situation is much worse." One of the most vulnerable creatures is likely to be the mollusc Limacina helicina, which seabirds, whales and several species of fish rely on for food. The process of acidification – by which carbon dioxide emitted into the atmosphere as pollution is absorbed by water and converted into carbonic acid – is taking places in seas and oceans across the world. But the prognosis is particularly bleak in the polar regions because the gas is more soluble in cold water than hot water. "Over the whole planet, there will be a threefold increase in the average acidity of the oceans, which is unprecedented during the past 20 million years," Prof Gattuso said "That level of acidification will cause immense damage to the ecosystem and the food chain, particularly in the Arctic." Prof Gattuso told the conference that hi-tech proposals for limiting the extent of climate change would have no affect on reducing the acidity of the oceans, and urged immediate action to cut greenhouse gas emissions. "Scientists have proposed all sorts of geo-engineering solutions to global warming. For instance, they have proposed spraying the upper atmosphere with aerosol particles that would reduce sunlight reaching the Earth, mitigating the warming caused by rising levels of carbon dioxide," he said. "But these ideas miss the point. They will still allow carbon dioxide emissions to continue to increase – and thus the oceans to become more and more acidic. "There is only one way to stop the devastation the oceans are now facing and that is to limit carbon-dioxide emissions as a matter of urgency." The increasing acidity of the Arctic Ocean may have a direct impact on the marine life of the British Isles, as the Lophelia pertusa coral responsible for creating reefs off the coast of Scotland is killed off. Hot topics Afghanistan (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/afghanistan/) Ireland (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/ireland/) Football (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/) Cricket (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/) Formula 1 (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/motorsport/formulaone/) Conservatives (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/conservative/) Paris Fashion Week (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/fashion/paris-fashion-week/) News UK News World News Obituaries Travel Health Jobs Sport Formula 1 Football Cricket Culture Motoring Dating Finance Personal Finance Markets Economics Fashion Property Games Comment Letters My Telegraph Blogs Technology Gardening Offers Contact Us Privacy Policy Advertising A to Z Announcements Marketplace Promotions RSS feeds Widgets Mobile Epaper Reader Prints Subscribe Syndication © Copyright of Telegraph Media Group Limited 2009 Terms and Conditions Today's News Archive Style Book Weather Forecast