Welcome to the EPOCA web site!

<em>Calcidiscus</em> today. By Ulf Riebesell
<em>Calcidiscus</em> in 2100. By Ulf Riebesell
<em>Lophelia</em> and <em>Paragorgia</em>. By Karen Hissmann
<em>Lophelia</em>. By Karen Hissmann
Live <em>Patella caerulea</em> in pH 7.4 in volcanic carbon dioxide vents (Hall-Spencer et al. 2008)
Pteropod <em>Limacina helicina</em>. By Steeve Comeau
<span style=\"font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; border-collapse: collapse; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px;\"><em>Orbulina universa</em>. By Jelle Bijma</span>
Cod (<em>Gadus morhua</em>) juvenile. By Catriona Clemmesen
<em>Posidonia oceanica</em> lacking <em>Corallinaceae</em> at mean pH 7.6 in volcanic carbon dioxide vents (Hall-Spencer et al. 2008)
Calcidiscus today. By Ulf Riebesell

The EU FP7 Integrated Project EPOCA (European Project on OCean Acidification) was launched in June 2008 for 4 years. The overall goal is to advance our understanding of the biological, ecological, biogeochemical, and societal implications of ocean acidification.

 

EPOCA aims to:

  • document the changes in ocean chemistry and biogeography across space and time
  • determine the sensitivity of marine organisms, communities and ecosystems to ocean acidification
  • integrate results on the impact of ocean acidification on marine ecosystems in biogeochemical, sediment, and coupled ocean-climate models to better understand and predict the responses of the Earth system to ocean acidification
  • assess uncertainties, risks and thresholds ("tipping points") related to ocean acidification at scales ranging from sub-cellular to ecosystem and local to global


The EPOCA consortium brings together more than 160 researchers from 32 institutes and 10 European countries (Belgium, France, Germany, Iceland, Italy, The Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom).

 

EPOCA is endorsed by:

IMBER LOICZ SOLAS

 

EPOCA summary in different languages:

 

EPOCA ocean acidification blog

The EPOCA blog provides daily updates on scientific articles and media coverage on ocean acidification.

Subscribe in a reader


about 1 day ago Some corals like it hot http://t.co/S9iaOZaW
about 1 day ago Temperatures -not acid- could cook coral to death http://t.co/Nqvnraua
about 1 day ago Rising sea temperatures boost coral growth http://t.co/BMuJk2G7
about 1 day ago Ocean warming drives coral growth rates in Western Australia http://t.co/sQLqsoId
about 1 day ago Element/Calcium ratios in middle Eocene samples of Oridorsalis umbonatus from Ocean Drilling Program Site 1209 http://t.co/EJPS27qO

 This web site is hosted by Observatoire Océanologique de Villefranche sur Mer