Date: 8/01/2024 18:43:47
From: PermeateFree
ID: 2111992
Subject: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

The Sargasso Sea in the Atlantic Ocean is now at least 30% more acidic and 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than it was 40 years ago — and climate change is to blame.


Researchers analyzed 40 years’ worth of data in the Sargasso Sea off Bermuda and found it is now warmer and more acidic than any point in recorded history.

The Sargasso Sea near Bermuda is warmer, saltier and more acidic than it has ever been since measurements began in 1954 — and the impact of such significant changes could be far reaching, researchers have warned.

The scientists made the startling discovery while studying decades’ worth of data from the Bermuda Atlantic Time-series Study (BATS), the world’s longest-running record of oceanographic properties that collects deep-sea measurements in the Atlantic Ocean near Bermuda.

The impacts of the climate-driven changes in the Sargasso Sea may have wide-reaching impacts as its water is carried to other ocean systems.

In a new survey, published Dec. 8 in the journal Frontiers in Marine Science, the researchers revealed over the last 40 years, that the ocean has warmed by around 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit (1 degree Celsius) and has drastically increased in salinity and acidity. The survey also showed a loss of dissolved oxygen.

Related: The surface of the ocean is now so hot it’s broken every record since satellite measurements began

“The ocean heat content in the 2020s is unparalleled to the longest record we have going back to the 1950s,” lead author Nicholas Bates, a chemical oceanographer at Arizona State University’s Bermuda Institute of Ocean Science, told Live Science.

Bates noted that current temperatures likely also smash records going back even further. “This is the warmest we’ve seen for millions and millions of years,” he said. The scientists attributed the dramatic rise to climate change.


Illustration showing the Sargasso Sea, where ocean temperature and acidity levels have increased significantly in the last four decades.

The survey also showed that the acidity of the Sargasso Sea has increased by 30% to 40% in the last 40 years. The rise of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels leads to carbon dioxide dissolving into the ocean. This can increase its acidity as the dissolved gas turns into carbonic acid, as well as carbonate and hydrogen ions.

The emission of greenhouse gases has also caused global ocean temperature rise. Oxygen dissolves less easily in warmer waters, leading to a nearly 7% decrease in oxygen in the Sargasso Sea.

Changes in air and ocean temperatures can also affect the rate that ocean water evaporates. Evaporation removes fresh water in the ocean, and precipitation returns it. The balance of the two processes can affect salinity.

“If you warm the planet and change of greenhouse gases, you change the global cycling of water — where it rains or where it doesn’t,” Bates said.

These changes may adversely affect local marine life as well as the coral reefs of Bermuda, the team said, which now face a dramatically different ocean chemistry from the 1980s.

What happens in this part of the ocean can also have a far wider impact. The Sargasso Sea is a unique region in the North Atlantic Ocean, which not only serves as a rich marine ecosystem but also a vital node in global ocean circulation. It is bounded by four currents: the Gulf Stream to the west; the North Atlantic Current to the north; and the Canary Current as well as the North Atlantic Equatorial Current to the east.

Bates stressed that climate change could affect other ocean systems in different ways, and what exact impact the observed changes will have on the local Sargasso Sea ecosystem and wider ocean are still uncertain.

He added that on a personal level, he is now concerned we may have passed a threshold “where there’s potentially no return for quite a long time.”

https://www.livescience.com/planet-earth/sargasso-sea-around-bermuda-is-now-at-its-hottest-most-acidic-and-oxygen-starved-than-at-any-point-in-recorded-history

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Date: 8/01/2024 19:52:25
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 2111997
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

You do realise, don’t you, that this is a synonym for “biologically rich”.

In particular, they include the parts of our ocean are the best whale feeding grounds.

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Date: 8/01/2024 20:00:15
From: OCDC
ID: 2111998
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

You do realise, don’t you, that warm and low oxygen water results in death of life that is in it?

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Date: 8/01/2024 20:13:26
From: PermeateFree
ID: 2112000
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

mollwollfumble said:


You do realise, don’t you, that this is a synonym for “biologically rich”.

In particular, they include the parts of our ocean are the best whale feeding grounds.

Well then you do realise, don’t you, that the Sargasso Sea in now under great threat. Things change you know and we must be careful not to make it worse.

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Date: 8/01/2024 20:20:20
From: Peak Warming Man
ID: 2112001
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

All I know is the Sargasso Sea is where eels go to do some serious rogering and breeding and stuff.

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Date: 8/01/2024 20:45:19
From: sarahs mum
ID: 2112004
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

Peak Warming Man said:


All I know is the Sargasso Sea is where eels go to do some serious rogering and breeding and stuff.

And the Bermuda triangle and the spooky stuff.

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Date: 8/01/2024 20:50:01
From: buffy
ID: 2112006
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

sarahs mum said:


Peak Warming Man said:

All I know is the Sargasso Sea is where eels go to do some serious rogering and breeding and stuff.

And the Bermuda triangle and the spooky stuff.

So it is all the fault of the eels! Supernatural eels!

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Date: 8/01/2024 20:52:49
From: party_pants
ID: 2112007
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

buffy said:


sarahs mum said:

Peak Warming Man said:

All I know is the Sargasso Sea is where eels go to do some serious rogering and breeding and stuff.

And the Bermuda triangle and the spooky stuff.

So it is all the fault of the eels! Supernatural eels!

Nah, it’s the godawful Sargassum seaweeds that are the problem.

Reply Quote

Date: 8/01/2024 20:52:54
From: sarahs mum
ID: 2112008
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

buffy said:


sarahs mum said:

Peak Warming Man said:

All I know is the Sargasso Sea is where eels go to do some serious rogering and breeding and stuff.

And the Bermuda triangle and the spooky stuff.

So it is all the fault of the eels! Supernatural eels!

:)

I remember in grade 5 I was given the story of the Marie Celeste in a comprehension test. I must have comprehended well because it really disturbed me.

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Date: 8/01/2024 20:56:21
From: sarahs mum
ID: 2112010
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

party_pants said:


buffy said:

sarahs mum said:

And the Bermuda triangle and the spooky stuff.

So it is all the fault of the eels! Supernatural eels!

Nah, it’s the godawful Sargassum seaweeds that are the problem.

burping methane.

Reply Quote

Date: 8/01/2024 21:01:14
From: buffy
ID: 2112011
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

sarahs mum said:


party_pants said:

buffy said:

So it is all the fault of the eels! Supernatural eels!

Nah, it’s the godawful Sargassum seaweeds that are the problem.

burping methane.

Marsh lights as well!!

Reply Quote

Date: 9/01/2024 06:25:15
From: roughbarked
ID: 2112041
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

But the problem is that it is now too hot.

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Date: 9/01/2024 10:19:07
From: Ogmog
ID: 2112079
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

roughbarked said:


But the problem is that it is now too hot.

spot on

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Date: 9/01/2024 10:34:21
From: Ogmog
ID: 2112081
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

roughbarked said:


But the problem is that it is now too hot.

I was talking with someone just last night about a 3rd party having gone out for crawdads;

he was complaining because whereas he’d usually come back with a bucket full an hour,
he wound up shifting rocks for 2hrs and coming up with just 2 Being human, he took both.

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Date: 9/01/2024 11:32:25
From: Cymek
ID: 2112092
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

Ogmog said:


roughbarked said:

But the problem is that it is now too hot.

I was talking with someone just last night about a 3rd party having gone out for crawdads;

he was complaining because whereas he’d usually come back with a bucket full an hour,
he wound up shifting rocks for 2hrs and coming up with just 2 Being human, he took both.

If you were an old rich man crawdad who had a couple of young female crawdads would you be a crawdad daddy ?

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Date: 9/01/2024 12:52:32
From: Ogmog
ID: 2112147
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

Cymek said:


Ogmog said:

roughbarked said:

But the problem is that it is now too hot.

I was talking with someone just last night about a 3rd party having gone out for crawdads;

he was complaining because whereas he’d usually come back with a bucket full an hour,
he wound up shifting rocks for 2hrs and coming up with just 2 Being human, he took both.

If you were an old rich man crawdad who had a couple of young female crawdads would you be a crawdad daddy ?


yes

Reply Quote

Date: 9/01/2024 13:01:30
From: Cymek
ID: 2112150
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

Ogmog said:


roughbarked said:

But the problem is that it is now too hot.

I was talking with someone just last night about a 3rd party having gone out for crawdads;

he was complaining because whereas he’d usually come back with a bucket full an hour,
he wound up shifting rocks for 2hrs and coming up with just 2 Being human, he took both.

Its not crawdads but it did make me realise the effect of pollution locally over the years
Took my children to look for tadpoles and we found one or two and they were deformed,when I was younger the swamp had hundreds of them at all different stages of the life cycle.

Reply Quote

Date: 9/01/2024 13:03:04
From: roughbarked
ID: 2112152
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

Cymek said:


Ogmog said:

roughbarked said:

But the problem is that it is now too hot.

I was talking with someone just last night about a 3rd party having gone out for crawdads;

he was complaining because whereas he’d usually come back with a bucket full an hour,
he wound up shifting rocks for 2hrs and coming up with just 2 Being human, he took both.

Its not crawdads but it did make me realise the effect of pollution locally over the years
Took my children to look for tadpoles and we found one or two and they were deformed,when I was younger the swamp had hundreds of them at all different stages of the life cycle.

Yeah, when I was young I used to catch tadpoles bring them home until thety srtarted growing legs then put them back in the stream.

Reply Quote

Date: 9/01/2024 13:04:27
From: roughbarked
ID: 2112154
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

roughbarked said:


Cymek said:

Ogmog said:

I was talking with someone just last night about a 3rd party having gone out for crawdads;

he was complaining because whereas he’d usually come back with a bucket full an hour,
he wound up shifting rocks for 2hrs and coming up with just 2 Being human, he took both.

Its not crawdads but it did make me realise the effect of pollution locally over the years
Took my children to look for tadpoles and we found one or two and they were deformed,when I was younger the swamp had hundreds of them at all different stages of the life cycle.

Yeah, when I was young I used to catch tadpoles bring them home until thety srtarted growing legs then put them back in the stream.

and the same with yabbies only my parents wanted to cook them. Can’t find either as easily these days.

Reply Quote

Date: 9/01/2024 16:51:38
From: Ogmog
ID: 2112270
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

roughbarked said:


roughbarked said:

Cymek said:

Its not crawdads but it did make me realise the effect of pollution locally over the years
Took my children to look for tadpoles and we found one or two and they were deformed,when I was younger the swamp had hundreds of them at all different stages of the life cycle.

Yeah, when I was young I used to catch tadpoles bring them home until thety srtarted growing legs then put them back in the stream.

and the same with yabbies only my parents wanted to cook them. Can’t find either as easily these days.

another thing that’s been long since recognized is endocrine disruptors when tadpoles started going missing
and traced it back to frogs inability to reproduce… then water fowl laying dud eggs
makes my unejukated questioning of WHY The Sudden up-tick of “Gender Disrupted” People
imo it’s worth looking into

Estrogen mimics are just a class of endocrine disruptors. Recent studies identified antiandrogenic
activity in environmental chemicals such as vinclozolin, a fungicide, and DDE, and insecticide.

Sexually Dimorphic Effects of Ancestral Exposure to Vinclozolin on Stress Reactivity in Rats

An updated review of environmental estrogen and androgen mimics and antagonists

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Date: 10/01/2024 06:20:08
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 2112448
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

party_pants said:


buffy said:

sarahs mum said:

And the Bermuda triangle and the spooky stuff.

So it is all the fault of the eels! Supernatural eels!

Nah, it’s the godawful Sargassum seaweeds that are the problem.

Thanks for pointing out Bermuda Triangle.

Personal opinion is that Nessie is a mating dance of European Eels. Eels go to the Sargasso Sea to spawn. So the mating dance there ought to be Awesome. “Supernatural” in the sense of super-nature.

Sargassum seaweeds do add to surface water heating (because it absorbs solar radiation), lower oxygen levels (when it rots).

> The Sargasso Sea is under great threat.

According to wikipedia,

“The Atlantic Ocean’s Sargasso Sea was named after the algae, as it hosts a large amount of Sargassum. The size of annual blooms in the Atlantic increased by over a hundred-fold, starting in 2011”.

Sargassum seaweed is at the bottom of the food chain. So there’s been a massive flow-on effect of burgeoning marine life in the Sargasso Sea. It’s becoming a new biological hot-spot. The exact opposite of under great threat.

Quoting higher temperatures and lower oxygen levels is like saying that forests are under threat because of all the rotting dead timber in them.

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Date: 10/01/2024 14:14:19
From: PermeateFree
ID: 2112604
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

mollwollfumble said:


party_pants said:

buffy said:

So it is all the fault of the eels! Supernatural eels!

Nah, it’s the godawful Sargassum seaweeds that are the problem.

Thanks for pointing out Bermuda Triangle.

Personal opinion is that Nessie is a mating dance of European Eels. Eels go to the Sargasso Sea to spawn. So the mating dance there ought to be Awesome. “Supernatural” in the sense of super-nature.

Sargassum seaweeds do add to surface water heating (because it absorbs solar radiation), lower oxygen levels (when it rots).

> The Sargasso Sea is under great threat.

According to wikipedia,

“The Atlantic Ocean’s Sargasso Sea was named after the algae, as it hosts a large amount of Sargassum. The size of annual blooms in the Atlantic increased by over a hundred-fold, starting in 2011”.

Sargassum seaweed is at the bottom of the food chain. So there’s been a massive flow-on effect of burgeoning marine life in the Sargasso Sea. It’s becoming a new biological hot-spot. The exact opposite of under great threat.

Quoting higher temperatures and lower oxygen levels is like saying that forests are under threat because of all the rotting dead timber in them.

Are you really that stupid?

Reply Quote

Date: 10/01/2024 14:19:56
From: Cymek
ID: 2112608
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

PermeateFree said:


mollwollfumble said:

party_pants said:

Nah, it’s the godawful Sargassum seaweeds that are the problem.

Thanks for pointing out Bermuda Triangle.

Personal opinion is that Nessie is a mating dance of European Eels. Eels go to the Sargasso Sea to spawn. So the mating dance there ought to be Awesome. “Supernatural” in the sense of super-nature.

Sargassum seaweeds do add to surface water heating (because it absorbs solar radiation), lower oxygen levels (when it rots).

> The Sargasso Sea is under great threat.

According to wikipedia,

“The Atlantic Ocean’s Sargasso Sea was named after the algae, as it hosts a large amount of Sargassum. The size of annual blooms in the Atlantic increased by over a hundred-fold, starting in 2011”.

Sargassum seaweed is at the bottom of the food chain. So there’s been a massive flow-on effect of burgeoning marine life in the Sargasso Sea. It’s becoming a new biological hot-spot. The exact opposite of under great threat.

Quoting higher temperatures and lower oxygen levels is like saying that forests are under threat because of all the rotting dead timber in them.

Are you really that stupid?

I suppose you can have a habitat under threat were the current existence is threatened but its going to thrive in a different way

Reply Quote

Date: 10/01/2024 14:29:47
From: Bubblecar
ID: 2112613
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

First step in constructing my layout will be to obtain and modify one of these laser-cut arched bridges.

My version will have small towers at each corner with lamps on top, plus little fenced pedestrian walkways outside the arch frame on each side.

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Date: 10/01/2024 14:30:15
From: Bubblecar
ID: 2112614
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

Um, chat thread ->

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Date: 10/01/2024 14:49:06
From: Ian
ID: 2112620
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

Bubblecar said:


Um, chat thread ->

Not if you stick a model Sargasso Sea underneath.

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Date: 10/01/2024 16:07:27
From: Witty Rejoinder
ID: 2112645
Subject: re: Sargasso Sea around Bermuda is now at its hottest, most acidic and oxygen-starved than at any point in recorded history

PermeateFree said:


mollwollfumble said:

party_pants said:

Nah, it’s the godawful Sargassum seaweeds that are the problem.

Thanks for pointing out Bermuda Triangle.

Personal opinion is that Nessie is a mating dance of European Eels. Eels go to the Sargasso Sea to spawn. So the mating dance there ought to be Awesome. “Supernatural” in the sense of super-nature.

Sargassum seaweeds do add to surface water heating (because it absorbs solar radiation), lower oxygen levels (when it rots).

> The Sargasso Sea is under great threat.

According to wikipedia,

“The Atlantic Ocean’s Sargasso Sea was named after the algae, as it hosts a large amount of Sargassum. The size of annual blooms in the Atlantic increased by over a hundred-fold, starting in 2011”.

Sargassum seaweed is at the bottom of the food chain. So there’s been a massive flow-on effect of burgeoning marine life in the Sargasso Sea. It’s becoming a new biological hot-spot. The exact opposite of under great threat.

Quoting higher temperatures and lower oxygen levels is like saying that forests are under threat because of all the rotting dead timber in them.

Are you really that stupid?

Yes.

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