Ocean Acidification’s Silent Threat: The Rising Calcite Compensation Depth

The ocean’s depths are facing a silent threat: the rising calcite compensation depth (CCD). As the ocean absorbs increasing amounts of carbon dioxide, it becomes more acidic, causing calcium carbonate, the material marine life uses to build shells and skeletons, to dissolve. This expanding zone of acidity is pushing the CCD upwards, threatening to fundamentally alter deep-sea ecosystems and impact the livelihoods of island nations.

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