Oyster crisis: Yale 360 eco-activist author Elizabeth Grossman wrong again about ocean acidification

I remember during my tour of Australia last year, when our talk was rudely interrupted by the king of reef madness, Ove Hugh-Guldberg, my co-presenter David Archibald quipped from the dais, paraphrasing Samuel Johnson, that “ocean acidification is the last refuge of the global warming scoundrel.

Today’s scare story about oysters disappearing due to atmospheric induced ocean acidification is a perfect example of this.

We see this terrifying headline from Yale 360 environmental forum today:

Massive Oyster Die-offs Show Ocean Acidification Has Arrived

The claim is right out of the “ocean acidification is going to kill the entire food chain” playbook, bolding mine:

But this rural coastal spot and the shellfish it has nurtured for centuries are a bellwether of one of the most palpable changes being caused by global carbon dioxide emissions — ocean acidification.

It was here, from 2006 to 2008, that oyster larvae began dying dramatically, with hatchery owners Mark Wiegardt and his wife, Sue Cudd, experiencing larvae losses of 70 to 80 percent. “Historically we’ve had larvae mortalities,” says Wiegardt, but those deaths were usually related to bacteria. After spending thousands of dollars to disinfect and filter out pathogens, the hatchery’s oyster larvae were still dying.

Finally, the couple enlisted the help of Burke Hales, a biogeochemist and ocean ecologist at Oregon State University. He soon homed in on the carbon chemistry of the water. “My wife sent a few samples in and Hales said someone had screwed up the samples because the [dissolved CO2 gas] level was so ridiculously high,” says Wiegardt, a fourth-generation oyster farmer. But the measurements were accurate. What the Whiskey Creek hatchery was experiencing was acidic seawater, caused by the ocean absorbing excessive amounts of CO2 from the air.

The only thing missing is equating oysters to canaries in coal mines. A typical staple of such types of stories. Bellwether was used instead, but you get the idea.

When you have a look at who’s writing this, you see a pattern:

Elizabeth Grossman is the author of Chasing Molecules: Poisonous Products, Human Health, and the Promise of Green Chemistry, High Tech Trash: Digital Devices, Hidden Toxics, and Human Health, and other books. Her work has appeared in Scientific American, Salon, The Washington Post, The Nation, Mother Jones, Grist, and other publications.

In nutshell, with a publication record like that, I wouldn’t trust this woman with any sort of factual writing anymore than I’d trust activist Bill McKibben. So, I went looking to see if her claims held up. It didn’t take long to discover that her claim of “…acidic seawater, caused by the ocean absorbing excessive amounts of CO2 from the air…” was totally bogus.

First I decided to have a look at the Whiskey Creek oyster hatchery itself. It seems it has been touted as a success story:

Note that they are using tanks, with seawater drawn in from the estuary. Grossman bemoans the fact that the water has to be treated for use in the aquaculture tanks. Apparently, atmospheric induced ocean acidification is happening so fast that they just can’t keep up:

The situation at the hatcheries has improved substantially in the past couple of years, thanks largely to an ongoing, intensive scientific monitoring effort and to measures to control the pH of seawater in the tanks where oyster larvae are raised. But ocean acidification continues apace, which makes understanding what’s been happening to Whiskey Creek oysters vital to grasping what will eventually threaten every ocean organism that builds a shell or coral branch.

Yes, it’s relentless and all that. The world’s oceans depend on what’s happening in some aquaculture tanks in Oregon. /sarc

Trying to get past the wailing and gnashing of teeth over some oyster larvae that didn’t make it out of the tanks, we find the source of the issue isn’t new, and was highlighted in a 2009 report at the Pacific Coast Shellfish Growers Association:

http://www.pcsga.org/pub/science/Emergency_Seed_Proposal_Indesign-1.pdf

Emergency Plan to Save Oyster Production on the West Coast

January, 2009

A Collaborative Proposal Prepared by the Pacific Coast Shellfish Growers Association, Whiskey Creek Hatchery, Taylor Hatchery, Pacific Shellfish Institute, Willapa-Grays Harbor Oyster Growers Association, Lummi Indian Tribe Hatchery, U.S. Department of Commerce (NOAA Aquaculture Program), Northwest Fisheries Science Center (NOAA), U.S. Department of Agriculture (ARS and CSREES), Oregon State University, AquaTechnics, Inc., and the Nature Conservancy

The Problem:

For the past three years, water quality conditions in the Pacific Ocean off the Oregon and Washington coasts; and adjacent highly productive estuaries including Puget Sound, Willapa Bay, and Netarts Bay, have severely impacted hatchery production of seed oysters upon which both large and small farms depend. Simultaneously, wild sets of oyster seed that make up the back-bone of the oyster industry in Willapa Bay, the single largest oyster producing region on the West Coast, have been virtually non-existent for the past four years.

These conditions have led to dire economic consequences for two of the four hatchery operators that produce oyster seed for farmers, including the largest producer of oyster larvae on the West Coast, Whiskey Creek Hatchery, which accounts for approximately 75% of all larvae utilized by farmers. The environmental conditions contributing to the lack of wild seed set presents an even more challenging problem.

So yes, there’s a real problem, but the issue that’s bogus is the claimed cause: “…acidic seawater, caused by the ocean absorbing excessive amounts of CO2 from the air…”

Um, no. From the same 2009 report, bolding mine:

Identified water quality/hatchery problems:

Shellfish hatcheries have historically used coarsely filtered but otherwise untreated seawater for larval culture with few problems, and larval shellfish have thrived in water in the Pacific Ocean and coastal estuaries. Upwelling of deep, cold, nutrient-rich water from the continental shelf off the coast of Oregon and Washington is typical during summer months in this region and drives high primary productivity.

Since 2003, however, higher than normal upwelling increased the extent and intensity of intrusions of deep acidic, hypoxic water off the Oregon and Washington coasts, and contributed to the formation of persistent dead zones. These events have resulted in fundamental changes in the character of our coastal bays, which contribute to high larval mortality throughout the entire year.

These fundamental changes in seawater quality influence a host of complex chemical interactions, many of which are not fully understood. However, recent research has identified at least four potential stressors that adversely affect shellfish larvae:

• Larval and juvenile shellfish are highly sensitive to acidic (low pH) seawater because their shells are formed from calcium carbonate, and dissolves when pH is low.

Because this hypoxic and relatively acidic up-welled water is coming from deep basins and is cold (8 – 10 oC), it is saturated with dissolved gases such as carbon dioxide and nitrogen while at the same time being low in oxygen as a result of biological decomposition in the benthic zone. When hatcheries heat this gas-saturated seawater to 25 – 28 oC in order to meet the temperature requirements of young shellfish, the seawater becomes super-saturated. Preliminary experiments indicate that oyster larvae are very sensitive to gas super-saturation under these conditions.

• A third problem for shellfish hatcheries is the recent increase in the prevalence of a pathogenic bacterium (Vibrio tubiashii or Vt) that seems to out-compete other, more benign species in this distorted environment. Vt infections are lethal to shellfish larvae and juveniles. High levels of mortality in shellfish hatcheries and in the wild have been associated with high levels of Vt in 2006, 2007, and intermittently in previous years, such as in 1998 when environmental conditions favored disease outbreaks.

• There is potential for further stress to oyster seed given the difference between water conditions in the hatcheries where larvae are produced, and quality of water found in the remote settings where larvae set onto cultch (“mother shell”) are planted in the natural environment for grow-out.

So, in summary the causes are:

1. Deep water upwelling, bringing colder more CO2 saturated water to the surface is the root cause. Colder water holds more CO2, it is basic chemistry.

That deep benthic ocean water doesn’t interact with the atmosphere, but it is brought to the surface by changes in ocean current patterns such as ENSO and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, which have nothing to do with the small (20 Parts Per Million) global increase in atmospheric CO2 in the last decade.

2. Heating of the water to make it suitable for tank aquaculture. They get the soda pop bottle on a warm day effect. The oyster larvae don’t like that. No surprise there.

3. A periodic pathogenic bacterium Vibrio tubiashii which seems to follow ocean patterns. What happened in 1998? Oh yeah, the biggest El Niño in modern times.

4. Stress with relocation into a different water environment. Anybody who has ever bought tropical fish, especially salt water fish, knows this problem.

It seems “…acidic seawater, caused by the ocean absorbing excessive amounts of CO2 from the air…” isn’t in this report.

Let’s have a look at the current ocean surface temperatures around Oregon:

It seems Oregon is smack dab in the middle of a double whammy right now of La Niña and cold phase of the PDO. Recall that in 2008, just before the “Emergency report” was prepared by the Pacific Coast Shellfish Growers Association there was also a deep La Niña in the Pacific. What did it look like then? Have a look:

Yep, colder. No surprise there.

For completeness I should note there’s a mention of “global warming induced ocean acidification” in the report, but it is ancillary and not listed as a direct cause of the current oyster aquaculture crisis in Oregon.

These adverse environmental conditions – low pH, gas super-saturation, high Vt infections, and the associated complex effects on seawater chemistry – constitute a “perfect storm” for Pacific Northwest shellfish hatcheries and growers that depend on natural set oyster seed, bringing the industry to the brink of collapse. It is not understood how these, and likely other, stressors interact, but it is clear that these factors are somehow combining to decimate shellfish larvae and juveniles. To further illustrate the seriousness of the situation, oceanographers such as Dr. Richard Feely, world-renowned NOAA expert on ocean acidification and global warming, predicts that oceanic conditions will not improve in the near term, potentially rendering shellfish hatcheries inoperable. This, combined with lack of wild seed set, will lead to the collapse of the oyster industry unless mitigation measures are developed and implemented immediately.

Feely’s opinion in this WWF document on ocean acidification seems to be a centered around the weasel word “could”, and concerns the future, rather than the present:

“…ocean acidification could affect some of the most fundamental biological and chemical processes of the sea in coming decades.”

So apparently, the Yale 360 headline claim of Massive Oyster Die-offs Show Ocean Acidification Has Arrived doesn’t agree with the position of the NOAA scientist on the issue.

I wonder though, why a World Wildlife Fund document exists on a NOAA server:

http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/co2/files/thecircle0410.pdf

Given all the tarnish that WWF has put on IPCC in scandal after scandal, I wonder if the Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (where Feely works) has also been similarly compromised by deep pocket eco-activism.

And of course the whole Yale 360 article by Elizabeth Grossman is bogus, not only for the fact that the changes in CO2 in the water at Whiskey Creek are driven by changes in ENSO, PDO, and cold water upwelling, but also because what happens in treated aquaculture tanks is not the ocean.

Green might be a good color, but it is also the color of bogus science claims affected by activism these days.

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November 21, 2011 6:09 pm

For newer WUWT readers, here are two excellent articles deconstructing the CO2=ocean acidification nonsense:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/06/19/the-electric-oceanic-acid-test
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/01/10/ocean-acidification-chicken-of-the-sea-little-strikes-again

Allencic
November 21, 2011 6:23 pm

Dr. K. A. Rodgers,
You’ve made my point. These characters like Ms. Grossman couldn’t begin to understand a classic like Krauskopf’s geochem book and yet within that book are all the explanations needed to debunk this ocean “acidification” crap.
As an aside, I worked for thirty years with another geology professor I greatly respected who grew up as Krauskopf’s next door neighbor.

Hoser
November 21, 2011 6:49 pm

Frank K. says:
November 21, 2011 at 5:59 pm

Yes, and it could be posted on the wall over a urinal for a while where it can be reviewed by several peers. OK. I’ll go away now.

JimF
November 21, 2011 7:06 pm

K.A. Rodgers says:
November 21, 2011 at 5:13 pm
says:
November 21, 2011 at 6:23 pm
Dr. Konrad Krauskopf (“Connie”) was a great scientist and terrific professor. His book is a classic. I’m so pleased to hear him mentioned respectfully here. He puts to shame these modern “geologists” prostituting themselves (and their professions) in this grant-fueled global warming scam.

eyesonu
November 21, 2011 7:08 pm

Anthony, as usual, you have performed a complete SMACKDOWN !
These people will never learn.

eyesonu
November 21, 2011 7:16 pm

Ahh, I should have added ‘and more smackdown’ coming from the commenters, again, as usual.

November 21, 2011 7:24 pm

Jeff B. said:
November 21, 2011 at 1:54 pm

If you need a reason to vote R in 2012, this is one of many.
————————————–
Rather than blindly voting R, vote Conservative. Many Rs are dupes of the global warming hoax, eg: Mitt Romney, Jon Huntsman, Fred Karger, Gary Johnson, Rich Perry, Newt Gingrich (depending upon whether he is flipping or flopping at the moment).

kim
November 21, 2011 7:34 pm

When ocean acidification gets buffered out, it’ll be species diversity. When that’s revealed as a bogus scare it’ll be something else. Damn, people, why won’t the guilt stick to you?
=======================

J. Felton
November 21, 2011 8:37 pm

Apparently the people who rush to judge the oyster die-offs as a result of ocean acidification have completely forgot, ( or thrown out ) the KISS method: Keep It Simple, Stupid. Why look at something entirely plausible, ( and possible) such as current changes and bacteria, ( which anyone who works in the fishing or seafood industry should know about,) when you can blame it on AGW, and get your article published in the ” News of the World”? ( Or Un-Scientific American, in this case.)
I grew up on the West Coast of BC, ocean acidification is the last thing I’m worried about.
Oh, and Smokey,
Thanks for those links! I used to have them bookmarked, but seemed to have lost them. Thanks again for re-supplying them. I know a man who’s taking oceanography at my local U, and he still believes in the acidification phenomenon. This should make him think.

November 21, 2011 8:42 pm

According to two recent survey articles by Dana Royer, for most of the past 550 Million years, atmospheric CO2 was 1000-3000 ppm. So how did all that limestone get laid down?
(The point estimates go to 5000 ppm or higher, but the measurement error is large. In only two periods did it go below 500 ppm, and those were both cursed with glaciation.)

Pamela Gray
November 21, 2011 8:54 pm

A hatchery is a stationary artificial place for oysters to grow. More than likely, such hatcheries were developed without a full understanding of long term oscillations that naturally resulted in increased/decreased production of sea life. The recent decrease at this hatchery may be mirroring what has occurred naturally when natural oyster beds were harvested. That this recent decrease sends still-wet-behind-the-ears researchers into a twitter pated sweat speaks more of their naiveté than their expertise.

November 21, 2011 9:00 pm

[ ” I wonder though, why a World Wildlife Fund document exists on a NOAA server:
http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/co2/files/thecircle0410.pdf
Given all the tarnish that WWF has put on IPCC in scandal after scandal, I wonder if the Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (where Feely works) has also been similarly compromised by deep pocket eco-activism. “]
Good Question:
Could it be………
[ “Awards
Heinz Environmental Award – 2010
Nobel Peace Prize (co-shared with Al Gore and other members of IPCC) – 2007
[snip] “]
http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/co2/story/Richard++A.+Feely,+Ph.D.

November 21, 2011 9:07 pm

Mark and two Cats said:
November 21, 2011 at 7:24 pm
Jeff B. said:
November 21, 2011 at 1:54 pm

If you need a reason to vote R in 2012, this is one of many.
————————————–
Rather than blindly voting R, vote Conservative. Many Rs are dupes of the global warming hoax, eg: Mitt Romney, Jon Huntsman, Fred Karger, Gary Johnson, Rich Perry, Newt Gingrich (depending upon whether he is flipping or flopping at the moment).
======================
Oops – I didn’t mean to include Perry. He believes in amnesty for illegal aliens, but he doesn’t believe in AGW hoax. Sorries.

November 21, 2011 9:23 pm

Hey – I just thought of a good name for Grossman’s movement: Green Oyster Cult 🙂
Okay, I’ll clam up now.

J. Felton
November 21, 2011 9:26 pm

I propose a new name – ” OysterGate. ”
I should trademark that….

David Falkner
November 21, 2011 9:31 pm

I”m sorry, but if the cold water is welling up and rich enough in oxygen to kill things in the biosphere, why ignore it as a possible source of CO2 in the atmosphere? Is the amount of additional CO2 from deeper waters quantified or even estimated or is it just assumed to be irrelevant?

David Falkner
November 21, 2011 9:38 pm

Oh crap.
…rich enough in oxygen…
should read:
…rich enough in CO2

tokyoboy
November 21, 2011 9:55 pm

J. Felton says: November 21, 2011 at 9:26 pm
“I propose a new name – ” OysterGate. I should trademark that….””
Calm down mate please. The trademark makes sense if and only if the story finds its way to AR 5.

CRS, Dr.P.H.
November 21, 2011 10:31 pm

I hate to be the poop, but….oceanic acidification seems to be the only provable consequence of carbon dioxide buildup in the atmosphere. I’m a biologist, not a climate scientist. The data for acidification in the uppermost boundary of the oceans (“euphotic zone”) is observed and significant, and the risk could be to oceanic photosynthetic processes, which provide the majority of our oxygen.
I’ve had plenty of shouting matches about this with many true-believer warmists in person & at RC & also with Willis, but the evidence is convincing. If this is happening, it is quite serious, folks.

One outcome of the observed widespread pH
declines (Figures 2 and 4) is an increasingly inhospitable
environment for calcifying marine plankton, such as pteropods,
forams, and coccolithophorids. Decreasing pH translates
directly to decreasing carbonate saturation states. The
physiological status of these pelagic calcifying organisms
currently abundant in the North Pacific is therefore likely to
be adversely impacted [Feely et al., 2004, 2008; Fabry et
al., 2008].

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 37, L02601, doi:10.1029/2009GL040999, 2010
Direct observations of basin-wide acidification of the North Pacific
Ocean

Robert H. Byrne, Sabine Mecking, Richard A. Feely, and Xuewu Liu
Received 15 September 2009; revised 20 November 2009; accepted 25 November 2009; published 20 January 2010.

paulsNZ
November 21, 2011 11:15 pm

You can fool all the people some of the time, and some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time.
Abraham Lincoln

Peter Miller
November 21, 2011 11:43 pm

JimF points out an inconvenient fact about fossil coral reefs during ancient geological times when we know carbon dioxide levels were much higher than they are today.
The geological record is a real bitch for the AGW cult, it disproves the ridiculous ocean acidification theory (from CO2, locally there may be other causes of acidification, such as industrial sulphuric acid and agricultural nitrogen) and it fails to show runaway temperature feedbacks as predicted by the IPCC.
But wait, records also show: i) no increase in the rate of increase of the sea level over the last few hundred years, ii) glaciers began retreating in the mid 1800s before CO2 began to increase, and iii) several warmer periods than today during the current inter-glacial cycle.
This is why ‘climate scientists’ need complex computer models and carefully considered assumptions to prove the records are incorrect.
As for oysters, they are a species which are usually super-sensitive to pollution, natural or manmade. Atmospheric CO2 levels are however one thing they are very definitely not sensitive to, as the geological record inconveniently confirms.
Finally, Oysters first appeared during the Ordovician Period, about 450 million years ago, and seem to have been largely impervious to changes in their environment since that time.

tokyoboy
November 21, 2011 11:54 pm

If ocean acidification (or reducing alkalinity) is SO SERIOUS NOW, marine life should have been MUCH MORE SERIOUSLY DAMAGED in the distant past, when CO2 was five- to ten-fold richer in the atmosphere, n’est-ce pas?

Shevva
November 22, 2011 12:16 am

Read the words CO2, didn’t bother to do any research just wrote an alarmist story, shove hand under the treasurers nose. More please.

Pete
November 22, 2011 12:32 am

As you point out Anthony, the average aquarist would appear to have a better grasp of water conditioning than either Elizabeth Grossman or the Whiskey Creek oyster hatchery owners!
Nice destruction of yet another Red Herring!

Al Gored
November 22, 2011 12:36 am

Excellent article, and research. And you even included what may be the one of the least required ‘sarc’ labels of all time.
“The world’s oceans depend on what’s happening in some aquaculture tanks in Oregon. /sarc”

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