Posted by admin on 03 15th, 2010 | no responses

Adding iron to sea boosts deadly neurotoxin, study finds

by Agence France-Presse WASHINGTON — Adding iron to the world’s oceans to capture carbon and fight global warming could do more harm than good, as the mineral appears to boost the growth of a plankton that produces a deadly neurotoxin, a study published on Monday shows. Researchers led by Charles Trick of the University of Western Ontario in Canada found that fertilizing the ocean with iron can boost the growth of Pseudo-nitzschia, a phytoplankton that produces a component of the neurotoxin domoic acid. Humans who eat shellfish or crab that have ingested Pseudo-nitzschia could get amnesic shellfish poisoning, severe cases of which can cause neurological symptoms, including permanent, short-term memory loss, which gives the intoxication its name. Amnesic shellfish poisoning can also be fatal. For the study, which was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers examined water samples taken from open-ocean tracts in the sub-Arctic North Pacific Ocean where iron-fertilization experiments were conducted. They found that the population of Pseudo-nitzschia had doubled compared to controls, that adding iron to the water appeared to increase the amount of domoic acid produced by individual phytoplankton, and that the natural release of the toxin boosted further growth of the potentially harmful plankton. Previous iron-enrichment experiments have focused on studying how adding iron to the sea affects carbon cycling, but have overlooked the potential ecological impacts of geoengineering-designed fertilizations, the study found. Earlier studies by other teams have shown that iron fertilization produced no measurable quantities of domoic acid, and that some coastal Pseudo-nitzschia produced only low concentrations of the toxin. Iron fertilization is still mainly in the experimental phases, with about “12 experiment-sized iron fertilizations” already undertaken, mainly in the Pacific Ocean, Trick told AFP. The findings of the study he led raise “serious concern over the net benefit and sustainability of large-scale iron fertilizations.” Scientists in the 1990s began fortifying small areas of the ocean where the sea water is rich in nutrients but low in plankton, to see if adding iron to the water would stimulate the growth of phytoplankton and boost carbon capture. Adding iron resulted in rapid growth of the phytoplankton, which, in the process of photosynthesis, uses energy from sunlight to fix inorganic carbon in surrounding surface waters to produce organic carbon. Some of the organic carbon ends up deep in the ocean, effectively removing carbon from the surface waters, while surface-water carbon is replenished by taking carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Iron fertilization, like other forms is geoengineering, is “purposely changing the system and may have unintended consequences,” said Scott Doney, a senior scientist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts, commenting to AFP on the findings. “You have to weigh how the changes affect higher animals, how it affects fish and mammals,” said Doney, who did not take part in the study. “You have to know what are the trade-offs between how much carbon you actually store and how big an effect you have on the environment.” Related Links: Bolivia summit to seek global climate change referendum Sanyo sets up solar parking lots for electric bikes Sole “Strategic Partner” of landmark geo-engineering conference is Australia’s “dirty coal” state of

Read this article:
Adding iron to sea boosts deadly neurotoxin, study finds

More on SKCEA.org:

  • The politics of the Gulf oil spill
    by Jonathan Hiskes The ecological fallout of the Gulf oil spill continues as emergency teams plan to set fire to the surface slick in hopes of keeping it away from the coast. The political fallout continues as well: More bad news for the Senate climate and energy bill , as coasta...
  • Rick Perry signs weirdly reasonable fracking disclosure law
    by Sarah Laskow. Rick Perry must have a secret plan to recapture George W. Bush's long-squandered image as an aisle-crossing Texas governor and run for president to the left of the Tea Party-addled Republican field. Or maybe he just decided to something right for a change. W...
  • Forests and the Health of the Planet
    The health of our forests directly impacts the health of the planet. The importance of forests to the Earth’s ecosystems cannot be overstated. Research shows that forest die-offs are on the increase and this troubling trend is being linked to global warming. Heat and water stress...
  • Critical List: Arizona wildfire spreads; Roundup causes birth defects
    by Sarah Laskow. The wildfire in Arizona is now the second-largest in the state's history and is growing . Enviros are turning on Obama. Former Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt said yesterday the president hadn't parried Republican attacks and lacked vision on the conser...
  • Fundamental breakthrough could double electricity from solar panels
    by Christopher Mims. It is a truth often repeated that fundamental physical limits mean solar panels can never capture and transform more than about 31 percent of the sun's energy. But Xiaoyang Zhu at the University of Texas apparently just did the impossible, and in a most ...

Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL

Leave a comment

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture. Click on the picture to hear an audio file of the word.
Click to hear an audio file of the anti-spam word