Warming and overfishing could switch the role of fishes in the marine carbon cycle
Por um escritor misterioso
Descrição
Bony fish are more often recognized as food sources than as carbon regulators. They provide an array of services relevant to climate change mitigation. For instance, they store carbon within their bodies as they grow and export it to deep seas through their sinking feces and carcasses. But they also make carbonates from marine salts within their guts and excrete them at high rates. This makes them especially important within the inorganic carbon cycle of the oceans.
Climate Change Could Drive Sharks to Fishing Grounds: Study
Long-term ocean and resource dynamics in a hotspot of climate change
Frontiers End Overfishing and Increase the Resilience of the Ocean to Climate Change
Oceana in Europe on X: 3 ways EU #fisheries accentuate the #ClimateCrisis: ⛽️ 6M tons of C02 release/yr due to fuel burning 🎣 Overfishing disrupts the role of fish in the carbon
Q&A: How might fishing be impacting the carbon cycle?, Imperial News
Fish faeces and ocean life: Better understanding marine carbon cycles could inform sustainable fishing policies: EMBO reports: Vol 23, No 2
Frontiers Understanding Environmental Changes in Temperate Coastal Seas: Linking Models of Benthic Fauna to Carbon and Nutrient Fluxes
Potential role of seaweeds in climate change mitigation - ScienceDirect
Study: Global warming above 2 degrees-C will lead to 'irreversible loss in marine ecosystem habitability' - Responsible Seafood Advocate
How Fish Are Being Affected by Climate Change - The National Wildlife Federation Blog
Let more big fish sink: Fisheries prevent blue carbon sequestration—half in unprofitable areas
de
por adulto (o preço varia de acordo com o tamanho do grupo)