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Postdoctoral researcher Justin
Ries, working with Anne
Cohen and Dan
McCorkle in the WHOI Geology
and Geophysics Department, grew this tropical pencil urchin (Eucidaristribuloides) and other marine
shell-building animals for months in tanks under atmospheres containing high
carbon dioxide levels. More carbon dioxide generates greater acidity in the
water, which can corrode calcium carbonate, the material many marine animals
use for their shells. Ries (now at the University of North Carolina) wanted to
test the animals' ability to build their shells under the increasingly high
levels of carbon dioxide predicted for the future, if fossil fuel reserves
continue to be burned and the resulting CO2 released.
(Photo by Tom Kleindinst, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)