Band of water where marine life can survive has reduced in more than a fifth of global ocean between 2003 and 2022
Changes in
global photic zones between 2003 and 2022 are shown with red areas to indicate
ocean darkening and blue lightening. Illustration: Thomas Davies/University of
Plymouth
Great swathes
of the planet’s oceans have become darker in the past two decades, according to
researchers who fear the trend will have a severe impact on marine life around
the world.
Satellite data
and numerical modelling revealed that more than a fifth of the global ocean
darkened between 2003 and 2022, reducing the band of water that life reliant on
sunlight and moonlight can thrive in.
The effect is
evident across 75m sq km (30m sq miles) of ocean, equivalent to the land area
of Europe, Africa, China and North America combined, and disturbs the upper
layer of water where 90% of marine species live.
Dr Thomas
Davies, a marine conservationist at the University of Plymouth, said the
findings were a “genuine cause for concern”, with potentially severe
implications for marine ecosystems, global fisheries and the critical turnover
of carbon and nutrients in the oceans.
Most marine
life thrives in the photic zones of the world’s oceans, the surface layers that
allow sufficient light through for organisms to exploit. While sunlight can
reach a kilometre beneath the waves, in practice there is little below 200
metres.
This upper
band of water is where microscopic plant-like organisms called phytoplankton
photosynthesise. The organisms underpin virtually all marine food webs and
generate nearly half the planet’s oxygen. Many fish, marine mammals and other
creatures hunt, feed and reproduce in the warmer waters of the photic zones
where food is most abundant.
Davies and his
colleagues drew on satellite data and an algorithm used to measure light in sea
water to calculate the depths of photic zones around the world. Darkening
affected 21% of the global ocean in the 20 years to 2022. In 9% of the ocean,
this led to photic zones being 50 metres shallower, while in 2.6% of the ocean,
the zones were 100 metres shallower. Details of this study appear in Global Change Biology.
The oceans
darken when light finds it harder to penetrate the water. It is often seen
along coastlines where upwellings of cold, nutrient rich water rise to the
surface, and where rainfall sweeps nutrients and sediments from the land into
the water.
The drivers
for darkening far offshore are less clear, but global heating and changes in
ocean currents are thought to be involved. “The areas where there are major
changes in ocean circulation, or ocean warming driven by climate change, seem
to be darkening, such as the Southern Ocean and up through the Gulf Stream past
Greenland,” Davies said.
Despite an overall darkening, about 10% of the ocean, or 37 million sq
km, became lighter over the past 20 years, the study found. Off the west coast
of Ireland, for example, a very large area of ocean has brightened, but further
out it has darkened.
“Marine organisms use light for a whole
variety of purposes. They use it for hunting, for mating, for timing
reproductive events. They use it for basically every single part of their
biology,” said Davies. “With ocean darkening, they have to move up the water
column, and there is less space, they’re all being squished up towards the
surface.”
Prof Oliver Zielinski, the director of
the Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research in Germany, said the darkening of
vast ocean areas was a “worrying trend”.
“Such changes can disrupt marine food webs, alter species distributions, and weaken the ocean’s capacity to support biodiversity and regulate climate,” he said. “Coastal seas, being closest to human activity, are particularly vulnerable, and their resilience is crucial for both ecological health and human wellbeing.”
Source: Planet’s darkening oceans pose threat to marine life, scientists say | Marine life | The Guardian

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