Triona McGrath: How pollution is changing the ocean's chemistry
Triona McGrath researches how the oceans are changing due to human activities. Full bio
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the oceans are in our daily lives?
and medicine and food
to feed the entire world population.
that the oceans were so vast
by human activities.
about a serious reality
called ocean acidification,
25 percent of all of the carbon dioxide
provided by the oceans
is one of the greenhouse gases
more and more and more
our ocean chemistry.
of chemical reactions.
the details of the chemistry for today.
carbon dioxide enters the ocean,
is an increase in ocean acidity.
is called ocean acidification.
alongside climate change.
ocean acidification for over two decades.
time series in Hawaii,
concentrations of carbon dioxide,
of human activities.
concentrations of carbon dioxide
in the surface of the ocean
at the same rate
since measurements began.
then shows the change in chemistry.
has entered the ocean,
an increase in ocean acidity.
monitoring ocean acidification --
Institute and NUI Galway.
acidification at the same rate
sites around the world.
of just how we collect our data
in the middle of winter.
in the North Atlantic
stormy conditions --
who get a little motion sickness,
some very valuable data.
over the side of the ship,
that are mounted on the bottom
the surrounding water,
or dissolved oxygen.
samples in these large bottles.
which can be over four kilometers deep
right up to the surface.
analyze them on the ship
for the different chemicals parameters.
going to affect all of us?
in ocean acidity of 26 percent
which is directly due to human activities.
our carbon dioxide emissions,
in ocean acidity of 170 percent
our children's lifetime.
is 10 times faster
for over 55 million years.
ever experienced
how they're going to cope.
event millions of years ago,
than what we're seeing today.
of many marine species.
some species are actually doing quite well
as ocean acidity increases,
ions in seawater decrease.
the building blocks
to make their shells,
ions in seawater
in order to build coral reefs.
of carbonate ions decrease,
to make their shells.
they can actually begin to dissolve.
it's called a sea butterfly.
in the ocean for many species,
was placed into seawater
by the end of this century.
at this very realistic pH,
has almost completely dissolved.
right up through the food chain --
likes shellfish? Or salmon?
in the ocean could be affected?
cold-water corals in Irish waters,
including some very important fisheries.
by the end of this century,
in the entire ocean
that is dissolving their coral structure.
are these healthy tropical corals.
we're expecting by the year 2100.
has almost completely dissolved.
in the entire ocean.
acidification is a global threat.
will look like when he's a grown man.
carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
carbon dioxide emissions.
for industry, for governments.
slow down global warming
and a healthy planet
and for generations to come.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Triona McGrath - Chemical oceanographerTriona McGrath researches how the oceans are changing due to human activities.
Why you should listen
Dr. Triona McGrath researches how the oceans are changing due to human activities, particularly in relation to ocean acidification. Specifically, McGrath monitors levels of carbon dioxide in Irish marine waters to determine the accumulation and movement of carbon in the ocean and subsequent increase in ocean acidity. McGrath and her colleagues published the first rates of ocean acidification for Irish offshore waters and the first baseline dataset of carbon parameters in Irish coastal waters. This is crucial in our understanding of the future health of our oceans along with providing information to determine the impacts of ocean acidification on marine ecosystems.
McGrath is a post-doctorate researcher at the National University of Ireland, Galway, funded by the Marine Institute, Ireland. She has been researching ocean climate change since 2008; her latest research project started in February 2017, and for the next four years she will work with colleagues to further develop ocean acidification research in Ireland through the continuation of an ongoing time series in the Rockall Trough and the determination of seasonal and interannual variability of the carbon system in coastal waters. McGrath is a Fulbright Scholar, receiving a Fulbright Postdoctoral Scholarship in 2013 to visit Prof. Andrew Dickson’s laboratory at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, San Diego to further develop analytical skills in ocean carbon chemistry.
McGrath has a Ph.D. in Chemical Oceanography and Bachelor of Marine Science from the National University of Ireland, Galway.
Triona McGrath | Speaker | TED.com