From the coast to the deep sea, changing oxygen levels affect marine life in different ways

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4 May 2024
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Earth’s atmosphere maintains a constant level of oxygen, whether it is a wintry, rainy day or hot summer. Across the ocean, oxygen concentrations vary enormously between different places and over time. Sometimes oxygen levels change within the course of a day, while in some deep parts of the ocean, oxygen concentrations remain constant. In certain places, there’s no oxygen at all but life still thrives.
Marine species respond to ocean deoxygenation (the decrease of oxygen levels in seawater) differently depending on where they live. With seas under threat from climate change and pollution, both of which contribute to deoxygenation, some marine species are at greater risk than others.
As a marine ecologist, I research how changes in oxygen availability affect marine animals’ resistance to climate change. My studies show that coastal marine species exposed to the daily variability of oxygen are more resistant to spikes in deoxygenation than creatures living in the deep that are adapted to consistent oxygen levels.
Oxygen levels in seagrass meadows vary enormously on a daily basis. Marco Fusi, CC BY-ND

By the coast

For coastal creatures like cuttlefish, sea stars or crabs living in seagrass, kelp forests or mangroves, daily life is an oxygen rollercoaster. During the day, photosynthesis by algae and plants is triggered by the sunlight and produces a massive amount of oxygen. This leads to oxygen supersaturation, a state where so much oxygen is produced that bubbles of oxygen are released into the water.
Coastal ecosystems like seagrasses, kelp, corals and mangroves help provide a buffer to deoxygenation because this supersaturation boosts the metabolism of marine life living there – with more available oxygen, animals can produce more energy and cope more easily with slight deoxygenation.
At night, without any sunlight, coastal algae and plants do not photosynthesise. Instead, they take in oxygen through the process of respiration – just as animals breathe, the leaves of plants respire and take oxygen into their cells. So animals there are exposed to a low-oxygen environment on a daily basis.
Algae on the forest floor of mangroves at high tide release oxygen bubbles as a result of supersaturation. Marco Fusi, CC BY-ND
These marine animals have evolved to cope with fluctuating levels of high and low oxygen in seawater by exploiting oxygen supersaturation during the day to protect themselves from rising temperatures and pollution. Then, during the night when oxygen is scarce, they switch to other anaerobic metabolism processes like fermentation – just as our muscles produce lactic acid during intense anaerobic exercise. Predatory crabs, for example, actively hunt in mangroves during the night with very limited oxygen.
But coastal animals adapted to short-term oxygen depletion cannot cope well with long periods without much oxygen. So problems arise when daily fluctuations of oxygen are disrupted by global warming and human-caused pollution, causing low oxygen conditions to persist for days or weeks. For sea urchins, this makes them slower and less able to escape from predators. For other animals, this might result in slower feeding rates or reduced growth.

In the deep ocean

At depths of between 200 to 1500 metres, in what is known as the “oxygen minimum zone”, oxygen is at the lowest level of saturation. Here, some deep sea animals, especially fish, are well adapted to these extremely low-oxygen conditions. While these fish won’t be directly affected by deoxygenation because they already thrive in this habitat, it’s more likely that deoxygenation will expand this low-oxygen zone, potentially affecting fish nearby that cannot tolerate further deoxygenation.
Read more: Climate change is depleting deep sea oxygen, but tides are helping to keep the ocean healthy
In the abyss, at depths of more than 3000 metres, animals are used to living in conditions where oxygen levels never fluctuate. Sunlight doesn’t ever reach the deepest parts of the seafloor and so photosynthesis cannot Earth’s atmosphere maintains a constant level of oxygen, whether it is a wintry, rainy day or hot summer. Across the ocean, oxygen concentrations vary enormously between different places and over time. Sometimes oxygen levels change within the course of a day, while in some deep parts of the ocean, oxygen concentrations remain constant. In certain places, there’s no oxygen at all but life still thrives.

Marine species respond to ocean deoxygenation (the decrease of oxygen levels in seawater) differently depending on where they live. With seas under threat from climate change and pollution, both of which contribute to deoxygenation, some marine species are at greater risk than others.

As a marine ecologist, I research how changes in oxygen availability affect marine animals’ resistance to climate change. My studies show that coastal marine species exposed to the daily variability of oxygen are more resistant to spikes in deoxygenation than creatures living in the deep that are adapted to consistent oxygen levels.

underwater shot of blue sea with green blades of seagrass growing from grey seabed
Oxygen levels in seagrass meadows vary enormously on a daily basis. Marco Fusi, CC BY-ND
By the coast
For coastal creatures like cuttlefish, sea stars or crabs living in seagrass, kelp forests or mangroves, daily life is an oxygen rollercoaster. During the day, photosynthesis by algae and plants is triggered by the sunlight and produces a massive amount of oxygen. This leads to oxygen supersaturation, a state where so much oxygen is produced that bubbles of oxygen are released into the water.

Coastal ecosystems like seagrasses, kelp, corals and mangroves help provide a buffer to deoxygenation because this supersaturation boosts the metabolism of marine life living there – with more available oxygen, animals can produce more energy and cope more easily with slight deoxygenation.

At night, without any sunlight, coastal algae and plants do not photosynthesise. Instead, they take in oxygen through the process of respiration – just as animals breathe, the leaves of plants respire and take oxygen into their cells. So animals there are exposed to a low-oxygen environment on a daily basis.

pale yellow seabed with close up shot of six or so thick dark green blades of seagrass, blurry water background
Algae on the forest floor of mangroves at high tide release oxygen bubbles as a result of supersaturation. Marco Fusi, CC BY-ND
These marine animals have evolved to cope with fluctuating levels of high and low oxygen in seawater by exploiting oxygen supersaturation during the day to protect themselves from rising temperatures and pollution. Then, during the night when oxygen is scarce, they switch to other anaerobic metabolism processes like fermentation – just as our muscles produce lactic acid during intense anaerobic exercise. Predatory crabs, for example, actively hunt in mangroves during the night with very limited oxygen.

But coastal animals adapted to short-term oxygen depletion cannot cope well with long periods without much oxygen. So problems arise when daily fluctuations of oxygen are disrupted by global warming and human-caused pollution, causing low oxygen conditions to persist for days or weeks. For sea urchins, this makes them slower and less able to escape from predators. For other animals, this might result in slower feeding rates or reduced growth.

In the deep ocean
At depths of between 200 to 1500 metres, in what is known as the “oxygen minimum zone”, oxygen is at the lowest level of saturation. Here, some deep sea animals, especially fish, are well adapted to these extremely low-oxygen conditions. While these fish won’t be directly affected by deoxygenation because they already thrive in this habitat, it’s more likely that deoxygenation will expand this low-oxygen zone, potentially affecting fish nearby that cannot tolerate further deoxygenation.

Read more: Climate change is depleting deep sea oxygen, but tides are helping to keep the ocean healthy

In the abyss, at depths of more than 3000 metres, animals are used to living in conditions where oxygen levels never fluctuate. Sunlight doesn’t ever reach the deepest parts of the seafloor andEarth’s atmosphere maintains a constant level of oxygen, whether it is a wintry, rainy day or hot summer. Across the ocean, oxygen concentrations vary enormously between different places and over time. Sometimes oxygen levels change within the course of a day, while in some deep parts of the ocean, oxygen concentrations remain constant. In certain places, there’s no oxygen at all but life still thrives.

Marine species respond to ocean deoxygenation (the decrease of oxygen levels in seawater) differently depending on where they live. With seas under threat from climate change and pollution, both of which contribute to deoxygenation, some marine species are at greater risk than others.

As a marine ecologist, I research how changes in oxygen availability affect marine animals’ resistance to climate change. My studies show that coastal marine species exposed to the daily variability of oxygen are more resistant to spikes in deoxygenation than creatures living in the deep that are adapted to consistent oxygen levels.

underwater shot of blue sea with green blades of seagrass growing from grey seabed
Oxygen levels in seagrass meadows vary enormously on a daily basis. Marco Fusi, CC BY-ND
By the coast
For coastal creatures like cuttlefish, sea stars or crabs living in seagrass, kelp forests or mangroves, daily life is an oxygen rollercoaster. During the day, photosynthesis by algae and plants is triggered by the sunlight and produces a massive amount of oxygen. This leads to oxygen supersaturation, a state where so much oxygen is produced that bubbles of oxygen are released into the water.

Coastal ecosystems like seagrasses, kelp, corals and mangroves help provide a buffer to deoxygenation because this supersaturation boosts the metabolism of marine life living there – with more available oxygen, animals can produce more energy and cope more easily with slight deoxygenation.

At night, without any sunlight, coastal algae and plants do not photosynthesise. Instead, they take in oxygen through the process of respiration – just as animals breathe, the leaves of plants respire and take oxygen into their cells. So animals there are exposed to a low-oxygen environment on a daily basis.

pale yellow seabed with close up shot of six or so thick dark green blades of seagrass, blurry water background
Algae on the forest floor of mangroves at high tide release oxygen bubbles as a result of supersaturation. Marco Fusi, CC BY-ND
These marine animals have evolved to cope with fluctuating levels of high and low oxygen in seawater by exploiting oxygen supersaturation during the day to protect themselves from rising temperatures and pollution. Then, during the night when oxygen is scarce, they switch to other anaerobic metabolism processes like fermentation – just as our muscles produce lactic acid during intense anaerobic exercise. Predatory crabs, for example, actively hunt in mangroves during the night with very limited oxygen.

But coastal animals adapted to short-term oxygen depletion cannot cope well with long periods without much oxygen. So problems arise when daily fluctuations of oxygen are disrupted by global warming and human-caused pollution, causing low oxygen conditions to persist for days or weeks. For sea urchins, this makes them slower and less able to escape from predators. For other animals, this might result in slower feeding rates or reduced growth.

In the deep ocean
At depths of between 200 to 1500 metres, in what is known as the “oxygen minimum zone”, oxygen is at the lowest level of saturation. Here, some deep sea animals, especially fish, are well adapted to these extremely low-oxygen conditions. While these fish won’t be directly affected by deoxygenation because they already thrive in this habitat, it’s more likely that deoxygenation will expand this low-oxygen zone, potentially affecting fish nearby that cannot tolerate further deoxygenation.

Read more: Climate change is depleting deep sea oxygen, but tides are helping to keep the ocean healthy

In the abyss, at depths of more than 3000 metres, animals are used to living in conditions where oxygen levels never fluctuate. Sunlight doesn’t ever reach the deepest parts of the seafloor andEarth’s atmosphere maintains a constant level of oxygen, whether it is a wintry, rainy day or hot summer. Across the ocean, oxygen concentrations vary enormously between different places and over time. Sometimes oxygen levels change within the course of a day, while in some deep parts of the ocean, oxygen concentrations remain constant. In certain places, there’s no oxygen at all but life still thrives.

Marine species respond to ocean deoxygenation (the decrease of oxygen levels in seawater) differently depending on where they live. With seas under threat from climate change and pollution, both of which contribute to deoxygenation, some marine species are at greater risk than others.

As a marine ecologist, I research how changes in oxygen availability affect marine animals’ resistance to climate change. My studies show that coastal marine species exposed to the daily variability of oxygen are more resistant to spikes in deoxygenation than creatures living in the deep that are adapted to consistent oxygen levels.

underwater shot of blue sea with green blades of seagrass growing from grey seabed
Oxygen levels in seagrass meadows vary enormously on a daily basis. Marco Fusi, CC BY-ND
By the coast
For coastal creatures like cuttlefish, sea stars or crabs living in seagrass, kelp forests or mangroves, daily life is an oxygen rollercoaster. During the day, photosynthesis by algae and plants is triggered by the sunlight and produces a massive amount of oxygen. This leads to oxygen supersaturation, a state where so much oxygen is produced that bubbles of oxygen are released into the water.

Coastal ecosystems like seagrasses, kelp, corals and mangroves help provide a buffer to deoxygenation because this supersaturation boosts the metabolism of marine life living there – with more available oxygen, animals can produce more energy and cope more easily with slight deoxygenation.

At night, without any sunlight, coastal algae and plants do not photosynthesise. Instead, they take in oxygen through the process of respiration – just as animals breathe, the leaves of plants respire and take oxygen into their cells. So animals there are exposed to a low-oxygen environment on a daily basis.

pale yellow seabed with close up shot of six or so thick dark green blades of seagrass, blurry water background
Algae on the forest floor of mangroves at high tide release oxygen bubbles as a result of supersaturation. Marco Fusi, CC BY-ND
These marine animals have evolved to cope with fluctuating levels of high and low oxygen in seawater by exploiting oxygen supersaturation during the day to protect themselves from rising temperatures and pollution. Then, during the night when oxygen is scarce, they switch to other anaerobic metabolism processes like fermentation – just as our muscles produce lactic acid during intense anaerobic exercise. Predatory crabs, for example, actively hunt in mangroves during the night with very limited oxygen.

But coastal animals adapted to short-term oxygen depletion cannot cope well with long periods without much oxygen. So problems arise when daily fluctuations of oxygen are disrupted by global warming and human-caused pollution, causing low oxygen conditions to persist for days or weeks. For sea urchins, this makes them slower and less able to escape from predators. For other animals, this might result in slower feeding rates or reduced growth.

In the deep ocean
At depths of between 200 to 1500 metres, in what is known as the “oxygen minimum zone”, oxygen is at the lowest level of saturation. Here, some deep sea animals, especially fish, are well adapted to these extremely low-oxygen conditions. While these fish won’t be directly affected by deoxygenation because they already thrive in this habitat, it’s more likely that deoxygenation will expand this low-oxygen zone, potentially affecting fish nearby that cannot tolerate further deoxygenation.

Read more: Climate change is depleting deep sea oxygen, but tides are helping to keep the ocean healthy

In the abyss, at depths of more than 3000 metres, animals are used to living in conditions where oxygen levels never fluctuate. Sunlight doesn’t ever reach the deepest parts of the seafloor andEarth’s atmosphere maintains a constant level of oxygen, whether it is a wintry, rainy day or hot summer. Across the ocean, oxygen concentrations vary enormously between different places and over time. Sometimes oxygen levels change within the course of a day, while in some deep parts of the ocean, oxygen concentrations remain constant. In certain places, there’s no oxygen at all but life still thrives.

Marine species respond to ocean deoxygenation (the decrease of oxygen levels in seawater) differently depending on where they live. With seas under threat from climate change and pollution, both of which contribute to deoxygenation, some marine species are at greater risk than others.

As a marine ecologist, I research how changes in oxygen availability affect marine animals’ resistance to climate change. My studies show that coastal marine species exposed to the daily variability of oxygen are more resistant to spikes in deoxygenation than creatures living in the deep that are adapted to consistent oxygen levels.

underwater shot of blue sea with green blades of seagrass growing from grey seabed
Oxygen levels in seagrass meadows vary enormously on a daily basis. Marco Fusi, CC BY-ND
By the coast
For coastal creatures like cuttlefish, sea stars or crabs living in seagrass, kelp forests or mangroves, daily life is an oxygen rollercoaster. During the day, photosynthesis by algae and plants is triggered by the sunlight and produces a massive amount of oxygen. This leads to oxygen supersaturation, a state where so much oxygen is produced that bubbles of oxygen are released into the water.

Coastal ecosystems like seagrasses, kelp, corals and mangroves help provide a buffer to deoxygenation because this supersaturation boosts the metabolism of marine life living there – with more available oxygen, animals can produce more energy and cope more easily with slight deoxygenation.

At night, without any sunlight, coastal algae and plants do not photosynthesise. Instead, they take in oxygen through the process of respiration – just as animals breathe, the leaves of plants respire and take oxygen into their cells. So animals there are exposed to a low-oxygen environment on a daily basis.

pale yellow seabed with close up shot of six or so thick dark green blades of seagrass, blurry water background
Algae on the forest floor of mangroves at high tide release oxygen bubbles as a result of supersaturation. Marco Fusi, CC BY-ND
These marine animals have evolved to cope with fluctuating levels of high and low oxygen in seawater by exploiting oxygen supersaturation during the day to protect themselves from rising temperatures and pollution. Then, during the night when oxygen is scarce, they switch to other anaerobic metabolism processes like fermentation – just as our muscles produce lactic acid during intense anaerobic exercise. Predatory crabs, for example, actively hunt in mangroves during the night with very limited oxygen.

But coastal animals adapted to short-term oxygen depletion cannot cope well with long periods without much oxygen. So problems arise when daily fluctuations of oxygen are disrupted by global warming and human-caused pollution, causing low oxygen conditions to persist for days or weeks. For sea urchins, this makes them slower and less able to escape from predators. For other animals, this might result in slower feeding rates or reduced growth.

In the deep ocean
At depths of between 200 to 1500 metres, in what is known as the “oxygen minimum zone”, oxygen is at the lowest level of saturation. Here, some deep sea animals, especially fish, are well adapted to these extremely low-oxygen conditions. While these fish won’t be directly affected by deoxygenation because they already thrive in this habitat, it’s more likely that deoxygenation will expand this low-oxygen zone, potentially affecting fish nearby that cannot tolerate further deoxygenation.

Read more: Climate change is depleting deep sea oxygen, but tides are helping to keep the ocean healthy

In the abyss, at depths of more than 3000 metres, animals are used to living in conditions where oxygen levels never fluctuate. Sunlight doesn’t ever reach the deepest parts of the seafloor andEarth’s atmosphere maintains a constant level of oxygen, whether it is a wintry, rainy day or hot summer. Across the ocean, oxygen concentrations vary enormously between different places and over time. Sometimes oxygen levels change within the course of a day, while in some deep parts of the ocean, oxygen concentrations remain constant. In certain places, there’s no oxygen at all but life still thrives.

Marine species respond to ocean deoxygenation (the decrease of oxygen levels in seawater) differently depending on where they live. With seas under threat from climate change and pollution, both of which contribute to deoxygenation, some marine species are at greater risk than others.

As a marine ecologist, I research how changes in oxygen availability affect marine animals’ resistance to climate change. My studies show that coastal marine species exposed to the daily variability of oxygen are more resistant to spikes in deoxygenation than creatures living in the deep that are adapted to consistent oxygen levels.

underwater shot of blue sea with green blades of seagrass growing from grey seabed
Oxygen levels in seagrass meadows vary enormously on a daily basis. Marco Fusi, CC BY-ND
By the coast
For coastal creatures like cuttlefish, sea stars or crabs living in seagrass, kelp forests or mangroves, daily life is an oxygen rollercoaster. During the day, photosynthesis by algae and plants is triggered by the sunlight and produces a massive amount of oxygen. This leads to oxygen supersaturation, a state where so much oxygen is produced that bubbles of oxygen are released into the water.

Coastal ecosystems like seagrasses, kelp, corals and mangroves help provide a buffer to deoxygenation because this supersaturation boosts the metabolism of marine life living there – with more available oxygen, animals can produce more energy and cope more easily with slight deoxygenation.

At night, without any sunlight, coastal algae and plants do not photosynthesise. Instead, they take in oxygen through the process of respiration – just as animals breathe, the leaves of plants respire and take oxygen into their cells. So animals there are exposed to a low-oxygen environment on a daily basis.

pale yellow seabed with close up shot of six or so thick dark green blades of seagrass, blurry water background
Algae on the forest floor of mangroves at high tide release oxygen bubbles as a result of supersaturation. Marco Fusi, CC BY-ND
These marine animals have evolved to cope with fluctuating levels of high and low oxygen in seawater by exploiting oxygen supersaturation during the day to protect themselves from rising temperatures and pollution. Then, during the night when oxygen is scarce, they switch to other anaerobic metabolism processes like fermentation – just as our muscles produce lactic acid during intense anaerobic exercise. Predatory crabs, for example, actively hunt in mangroves during the night with very limited oxygen.

But coastal animals adapted to short-term oxygen depletion cannot cope well with long periods without much oxygen. So problems arise when daily fluctuations of oxygen are disrupted by global warming and human-caused pollution, causing low oxygen conditions to persist for days or weeks. For sea urchins, this makes them slower and less able to escape from predators. For other animals, this might result in slower feeding rates or reduced growth.

In the deep ocean
At depths of between 200 to 1500 metres, in what is known as the “oxygen minimum zone”, oxygen is at the lowest level of saturation. Here, some deep sea animals, especially fish, are well adapted to these extremely low-oxygen conditions. While these fish won’t be directly affected by deoxygenation because they already thrive in this habitat, it’s more likely that deoxygenation will expand this low-oxygen zone, potentially affecting fish nearby that cannot tolerate further deoxygenation.

Read more: Climate change is depleting deep sea oxygen, but tides are helping to keep the ocean healthy

In the abyss, at depths of more than 3000 metres, animals are used to living in conditions where oxygen levels never fluctuate. Sunlight doesn’t ever reach the deepest parts of the seafloor andEarth’s atmosphere maintains a constant level of oxygen, whether it is a wintry, rainy day or hot summer. Across the ocean, oxygen concentrations vary enormously between different places and over time. Sometimes oxygen levels change within the course of a day, while in some deep parts of the ocean, oxygen concentrations remain constant. In certain places, there’s no oxygen at all but life still thrives.

Marine species respond to ocean deoxygenation (the decrease of oxygen levels in seawater) differently depending on where they live. With seas under threat from climate change and pollution, both of which contribute to deoxygenation, some marine species are at greater risk than others.

As a marine ecologist, I research how changes in oxygen availability affect marine animals’ resistance to climate change. My studies show that coastal marine species exposed to the daily variability of oxygen are more resistant to spikes in deoxygenation than creatures living in the deep that are adapted to consistent oxygen levels.

underwater shot of blue sea with green blades of seagrass growing from grey seabed
Oxygen levels in seagrass meadows vary enormously on a daily basis. Marco Fusi, CC BY-ND
By the coast
For coastal creatures like cuttlefish, sea stars or crabs living in seagrass, kelp forests or mangroves, daily life is an oxygen rollercoaster. During the day, photosynthesis by algae and plants is triggered by the sunlight and produces a massive amount of oxygen. This leads to oxygen supersaturation, a state where so much oxygen is produced that bubbles of oxygen are released into the water.

Coastal ecosystems like seagrasses, kelp, corals and mangroves help provide a buffer to deoxygenation because this supersaturation boosts the metabolism of marine life living there – with more available oxygen, animals can produce more energy and cope more easily with slight deoxygenation.

At night, without any sunlight, coastal algae and plants do not photosynthesise. Instead, they take in oxygen through the process of respiration – just as animals breathe, the leaves of plants respire and take oxygen into their cells. So animals there are exposed to a low-oxygen environment on a daily basis.

pale yellow seabed with close up shot of six or so thick dark green blades of seagrass, blurry water background
Algae on the forest floor of mangroves at high tide release oxygen bubbles as a result of supersaturation. Marco Fusi, CC BY-ND
These marine animals have evolved to cope with fluctuating levels of high and low oxygen in seawater by exploiting oxygen supersaturation during the day to protect themselves from rising temperatures and pollution. Then, during the night when oxygen is scarce, they switch to other anaerobic metabolism processes like fermentation – just as our muscles produce lactic acid during intense anaerobic exercise. Predatory crabs, for example, actively hunt in mangroves during the night with very limited oxygen.

But coastal animals adapted to short-term oxygen depletion cannot cope well with long periods without much oxygen. So problems arise when daily fluctuations of oxygen are disrupted by global warming and human-caused pollution, causing low oxygen conditions to persist for days or weeks. For sea urchins, this makes them slower and less able to escape from predators. For other animals, this might result in slower feeding rates or reduced growth.

In the deep ocean
At depths of between 200 to 1500 metres, in what is known as the “oxygen minimum zone”, oxygen is at the lowest level of saturation. Here, some deep sea animals, especially fish, are well adapted to these extremely low-oxygen conditions. While these fish won’t be directly affected by deoxygenation because they already thrive in this habitat, it’s more likely that deoxygenation will expand this low-oxygen zone, potentially affecting fish nearby that cannot tolerate further deoxygenation.

Read more: Climate change is depleting deep sea oxygen, but tides are helping to keep the ocean healthy

In the abyss, at depths of more than 3000 metres, animals are used to living in conditions where oxygen levels never fluctuate. Sunlight doesn’t ever reach the deepest parts of the seafloor and so photosynthesis cannot so photosynthesis cannot so photosynthesis cannot so photosynthesis cannot so photosynthesis cannot so photosynthesis cannot

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