Oceans are changing colour and climate change may be to blame
Scientists say they have detected shifts in colours across more than half of the worlds oceans. Over the past 20 years, huge swathes of the worlds oceans have changed colour, displaying a subtle greening towards the tropics that researchers say points to the effect of climate change on life in the worlds seas. In new research published on Wednesday, scientists said they had detected shifts in colours across more than half of the worlds oceans an expanse bigger than Earths total land area. Authors of the study in the journal Nature think that is down to changes in ecosystems, and particularly in tiny plankton, which are the centrepiece of the marine food web and play a crucial part in stabilising our atmosphere. The reason we care about the colour changes is because the colour reflects the state of the ecosystem, so colour changes mean ecosystem changes, lead author BB Cael, of Britains National Oceanography Centre, told AFP news agency. The colour of the seas when seen from space can paint a picture of what is going on in the upper layers of the water. A deep blue would tell you that there is not much life, while if the water is greener it is likely to have more activity, specifically from photosynthesising phytoplankton, which like plants contain the green pigment chlorophyll. These produce a significant amount of the oxygen we breathe, are a crucial part of the global carbon cycle and are a foundational part of the ocean food web. Researchers are keen to develop ways of monitoring changes in ecosystems in order to track climate changes and enshrine protected areas. But previous studies have suggested you would need three decades of ocean chlorophyll monitoring to detect a trend because of annual variations. In the latest study, researchers broadened the colour spectrum, looking at seven hues of ocean colour monitored by the MODIS-Aqua satellite from 2002 to 2022. These are too subtle for humans to see and would look largely blue to the naked eye. The authors analysed the observational data to detect a trend above the year-to-year variability and then compared it to computer models of what would be expected with climate change. They found that the real-world observations tallied closely with the changes predicted. While the researchers said more work would be needed to find out what exactly those colour changes might mean, they said climate change was very likely to be the cause. Ive been running simulations that have been telling me for years that these changes in ocean colour are going to happen, said co-author Stephanie Dutkiewicz, of MITs Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences at the Center for Global Change Science. To actually see it happening for real is not surprising, but frightening. And these changes are consistent with man-induced changes to our climate.