Indo-Pak nuclear war damaged ocean life

Study published in Geophysical Research LettIners journal that “A nuclear war between India and Pakistan could deteriorate the impact of ocean acidification on corals, clams, oysters and other marine life with shells or skeletons”

Indo-Pak nuclear war damaged ocean lifeStudy on how climate changes stemming from nuclear war would affect the ocean life by co-author Alan Robock who is distinguished Professor at Rutgers University in the US said “We found that the ocean’s chemistry would change, with global cooling dissolving atmospheric carbon into the upper ocean and exacerbating the primary threat of ocean acidification”.

They used a global climate model in which the climate reacted to soot (black carbon) in smoke that would be injected into the upper atmosphere from fires ignited by nuclear weapons.

They considered a range of hypothetical nuclear wars, including a relatively small one between India and Pakistan and a large one between the US and Russia.

Excess carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil fuels enters the ocean and reacts with water to form carbonic acid, which decreases ocean pH (makes it more acidic) and lowers levels of carbonate ions.

 According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Corals, clams, oysters and other marine organisms use carbonate ions to create their shells and skeletons.

According to the study A more acidic ocean makes it harder to form and maintain shells and skeletons. The massive amount of smoke from a nuclear conflict would block sunlight and cause global cooling.

The cooling would temporarily boost the pH in the surface ocean over five years and briefly lessen the decline in pH from ocean acidification. But the cooling would also lead to lower levels of carbonate ions for about 10 years, challenging shell maintenance in marine organisms.

Alan Robock said “We have known for a while that agriculture on land would be severely affected by climate change from nuclear war”.

He added “A lingering question is whether the survivors could still get food from the sea. Our study is the first step in answering this question”.

The next step is to combine projected changes in ocean chemistry with projected changes in temperature and salinity and assess their impacts on shellfish and fish stocks throughout the oceans.