When co 2 is absorbed by seawater a series of chemical reactions occur resulting.
Dissolved carbon dioxide in water on the ocean floor.
The ocean absorbs about 30 of the carbon dioxide co 2 that is released in the atmosphere as levels of atmospheric co 2 increase from human activity such as burning fossil fuels e g car emissions and changing land use e g deforestation the amount of carbon dioxide absorbed by the ocean also increases.
In the short term the ocean absorbs atmospheric carbon dioxide into the mixed layer a thin layer of water with nearly uniform temperature salinity and dissolved gases.
Carbon dioxide from the atmosphere dissolves in the surface waters of the ocean.
Rising temperatures make carbon dioxide leak from the oceans for two main reasons.
Consequently more co2 is being absorbed by the oceans altering the carbonate chemistry of ocean surface waters.
Wind driven turbulence maintains the mixed layer by stirring the water near the ocean s surface.
Aragonite is more soluble than calcite so the aragonite compensation depth is generally.
Some of the carbon dioxide stays as dissolved gas but much of it gets turned into other things.
First melting sea ice increases the rate that the ocean mixes which dredges up co 2 rich deep ocean waters.
After atmospheric carbon dioxide dissolves into the ocean the aqueous carbon dioxide reacts with seawater to form carbonic acid.
As carbonic acid continues to interact with water molecules carbonate is formed which increases the concentration of hydrogen ions in the ocean and consequently reduces ocean ph therefore increasing carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere decreases ocean ph.
It reduces its ph and concentrations of carbonate ions while increasing dissolved inorganic carbon in the form of bicarbonate.
Aragonite compensation depth hence acd describes the same behaviour in reference to aragonitic carbonates.
That also means the water at the bottom of the ocean like the water at the top is getting more acidic.
Carbonate compensation depth ccd is the depth in the oceans below which the rate of supply of calcite calcium carbonate lags behind the rate of solvation such that no calcite is preserved.
Since the beginning of industrialisation in the 18th century man made co2 emissions have progressively increased co2 concentrations in the atmosphere.