May 19, 2000


Increasing Carbon Dioxide Threatens Coral Reefs,
Coral Growth Could Be Reduced By 40% In 65 years

Researchers at Columbia's Biosphere 2 Center have determined that increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the Earth's atmosphere may cause more harm to marine coral reef communities than previous research indicated. Dr. Christopher Langdon of Columbia's Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory and his research team believe that coral growth could be reduced by as much as 40 percent from pre-industrial levels over the next 65 years.

The team found no evidence that reef organisms are able to acclimate after prolonged exposure to the reduced carbonate levels. "This is the first real evidence that increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide levels have a negative impact on a major Earth ecosystem," says Langdon, whose research will be described in the June edition of Global Biogeochemical Cycles, published by the American Geophysical Union which disseminates research findings in all aspects of global environmental change.

Langdon's team is investigating the impact of changing seawater chemistry on coral reef calcification rates. By mid-century, increasing levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide, caused primarily by the burning of fossil fuels, are expected to reduce by 30 percent the carbonate ion concentration of the surface ocean. When Langdon changed the carbonate concentration in the Biosphere 2 ocean to that projected level, he observed significant reduction in calcification rates for the coral and coralline algae.

Langdon believes the results of his research have some important implications. Coral reefs are natural breakwaters protecting tropical islands and other coastal areas from beach erosion. "While some terrestrial ecosystems may actually benefit from elevated carbon dioxide levels, that does not appear to be the case for shallow marine ecosystems like a coral reef," he says. The impacts are much greater than previously believed, leading to increasing vulnerability of many reefs to other man-caused sources of stress, like over-fishing or pollution, he says.

The project is underway in the ocean ecosystem at Biosphere 2 laboratory near Oracle, Ariz. The 700,000-gallon aquarium of artificial seawater with its community of coral reef life mimics key aspects of real world coral reef ecosystems. Biosphere 2 President and Executive Director William Harris says the ability to precisely control the chemical environment and to accurately measure changes in the system offers a unique opportunity to conduct research of this kind.

"Research findings like those produced by the Langdon team begin to indicate the true potential of the Biosphere 2 laboratory," says Harris. "We fully expect that other studies of global climate change issues underway or planned for the laboratory will also produce significant results."

Columbia established a western campus at Biosphere 2 in 1996. Trustees of the school recently approved spending $50 million to enhance research capabilities inside the 3.13-acre, sealed glass laboratory and to expand undergraduate enrollment, develop new academic programs and construct new facilities on the Biosphere 2 campus.