NOAA Research: Impacts of fossil fuels on fish and people

2008 piece provided as background:
http://www.eurekalert.org/aaasnewsroom/2008/index.php?start=25

Public release date: 16-Feb-2008

Contact: Ben Sherman
ben.sherman@noaa.gov
202-253-5256
NOAA Research

Scientist John Incardona will tell a scientific detective story that uncovers a previously unrecognized threat to human health from a ubiquitous class of air pollutants.

Incardona of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration joins five other scientists from the U.S. government, Canadian government and academia in the symposium entitled “From Kitchen Sinks to Ocean Basins: Emerging Chemical Contaminants and Human Health.” Organized by NOAA’s Oceans and Human Health Initiative, the symposium is one of the features of the AAAS annual meeting.

Incardona’s presentation delves into how one type of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon, a compound found in oil, damaged the developing hearts of Pacific herring and pink salmon embryos after the Exxon Valdez spill of 1989.
Certain PAHs were recognized as carcinogenic more than a century ago, but a class of PAHs with a different structure was ruled out as a carcinogen and was largely ignored. What Incardona learned was that this class of PAHs, also found in oil, is toxic to the developing hearts of fish.

This same class of PAHs is found in emissions from the burning of gasoline and other petroleum products; emissions that are ubiquitous in urban air.
“There is now an emerging link between ambient urban air and human heart diseases,” Incardona said. “Our analysis indicates that these airborne contaminants are likely to be toxic to the human heart when inhaled and should be considered prime suspects in the cardiovascular impacts of urban air.” 

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To learn more about Incardona’s research, please attend his presentation. Journalists are also welcome to interview Dr. Incardona. For more information on the Oceans and Human Health Initiative go to www.nwfsc.noaa.gov/ohh

CaribeSave: UNDP – an overview of Modelling Climate Change Impacts in the Caribbean Region with Contribution from the Pacific Islands:

http://www.caribsave.org/index.php?id=5

A new report spearheaded by the CARIBSAVE project under UNDP funding
highlights the impacts of climate change on Caribbean nations and
natural resources. In particular, the report highlights the difference
in the impacts at the 2.0°C increase being pushed by many UN
negotiators vs. the 1.5°C increase promoted by the Alliance of Small
Island States. The report focuses on: the implications of ice sheet
melt for global sea level rise (SLR); the projections and implications
of SLR for the Caribbean region; evaluation of the differential
impacts of +1.5° and +2°C on coral reefs, water resources and
agriculture in the Caribbean, with additional analysis for the Pacific
islands. Of particular interest are the sections on climate change and
ocean acidification impacts on Caribbean coral reefs — analysis led
by NOAA’s Coral Reef Watch and its partners.

Special thanks to Mark Eakin and the coral-list

C. Mark Eakin, Ph.D.
Coordinator, NOAA Coral Reef Watch
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Center for Satellite Applications and Research
Satellite Oceanography & Climate Division
e-mail: mark.eakin@noaa.gov
url: coralreefwatch.noaa.gov

Sesoki Ocean Acidification Project: Ocean Acidification reduces sperm flagellar motility in broadcast spawning reef invertebrates and other related studies

Ocean acidification reduces sperm flagellar motility in broadcast spawning reef invertebrates.

http://aical-sesoko.jp/en

Sesoko ocean acidification project is one of subtopics of “Experimental studies of the effects of ocean acidification on calcifying organisms” which is supported by 2008 Global Environment Research Fund (No. B-084) by Ministry of the Environment Government of Japan.

Here you’ll find several scientific studies of the effects of ocean acidification on coral reefs.  Check it out.

CARMABI Caribbean Marine Biology Institute

http://www.researchstationcarmabi.org/

Nature, both above as below the water, has been intensively studied on Curaçao for more than five decades resulting in a large number of studies and publications. To facilitate this research, CARMABI, short for the Caribbean Marine Biological Institute was founded in 1955. In addition to facilitating and conducting research, this institute now plays an important role in advising government and other local organizations on the sustainable use of its natural resources. At present the institute runs a Natural Parks program by which it manages several protected areas such as the Christoffel Park (2000 hec2), the Shete Boka Park, known for its nesting turtles and the Curacao Marine Park, spanning 20km of uninhabited shore line.