Sunday, April 03, 2016

The lakes are far smaller than oceans and have closed borders.

July 23, 2013

Arenac County (click here) — Available data from the Environmental Protection Agency suggests the Great Lakes could be soaking up carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, which could change the pH levels in the water and have a negative impact on wildlife.
Galen McKinley, ocean sciences professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said while data is currently limited, computer projections suggest the Great Lakes’ waters are becoming more acidic due to human carbon emissions. She said a similar process is happening in the open oceans.
According to data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administ-
ration, when carbon dioxide in the atmosphere gets absorbed by bodies of water, the ensuing chemical reaction will reduce the pH level in the water. The pH level of a liquid indicates how acidic or basic it is on a 0-14 scale, with water usually measuring at 7 — perfectly neutral. Lowered pH levels should not impact the drinkability of the water in the lake, McKinley said.
McKinley said the open oceans have faced a 30-percent increase in acidity since the Industrial Revolution, and the NOAA estimates that with current carbon emissions, by 2100 the ocean surfaces could be 150 percent more acidic than pre-industrial levels.
McKinley believes the Great Lakes, and smaller inland lakes, could be facing the same issues on a smaller scale. She said Lakes Michigan, Superior and Huron have long residency periods — water tends to stay in the lake for 100-200 years before moving elsewhere in the watershed. She said that means they tend to be in equilibrium with atmospheric carbon dioxide levels.
“If you just think about the chemistry of carbon and water and about what we know about the Great Lakes, they are more or less responsive,” McKinley said. “They are in equilibrium with the atmospheric carbon dioxide, so the carbon dioxide in the water will also increase and the pH will go down, similarly to the oceans.”...