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Size comparison of two American lobsters.

Size comparison of two American lobsters.
Size comparison of two American lobsters.
Size comparison of two American lobsters.
Size comparison of two American lobsters.
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162907
Ries, Justin
Size comparison of two American lobsters.
Still Image
05/21/2010
riesLobstersfin.jpg
Image of The Day caption:
Post-doc Justin Ries--now at UNC--along with WHOI scientists Anne Cohen and Dan McCorkle--grew shell-building ocean animals in water under air containing different levels of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that makes seawater more acidic and corrosive to calcium carbonate shells. In a surprising finding, American lobsters and some other crustaceans grown under very high carbon dioxide (at right) grew larger, heavier shells than lobsters (left) grown under levels found in today's atmosphere. Shells of other organisms, however, were damaged by the higher acidity.
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 48, No. 1, pg. 7:
In a surprising finding, American lobsters grown under very high levels of carbon dioxide (at right) grew larger, heavier shells than lobsters (left) grown under todays levels.
Photo by Justin Ries
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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