Ocean Acidification Content / Ocean Acidification Content for °ÅÀÖÊÓƵ en Tessa Hill: Telling the Ocean’s Secrets /news/climate/tessa-hill-telling-oceans-secrets °ÅÀÖÊÓƵ marine geochemist Tessa Hill talks about the emotional burdens and joys of studying climate change for this series about confronting climate anxiety. August 08, 2022 - 10:00am Katherine E Kerlin /news/climate/tessa-hill-telling-oceans-secrets Seagrasses Turn Back the Clock on Ocean Acidification /climate/news/seagrasses-turn-back-the-clock-on-ocean-acidification <p><span><span>Spanning six years and seven seagrass meadows along the California coast, a paper from the °ÅÀÖÊÓƵ, Davis, is the most extensive study yet of how seagrasses can buffer ocean acidification. </span></span></p> March 31, 2021 - 9:00am Katherine E Kerlin /climate/news/seagrasses-turn-back-the-clock-on-ocean-acidification For Red Abalone, Resisting Ocean Acidification Starts With Mom /climate/news/for-red-abalone-resisting-ocean-acidification-starts-with-mom <p>Red abalone mothers from California’s North Coast give their offspring an energy boost when they’re born that helps them better withstand ocean acidification compared to their captive, farmed counterparts, according to a study from the Bodega Marine Laboratory at the °ÅÀÖÊÓƵ, Davis.</p> October 05, 2020 - 12:00pm Katherine E Kerlin /climate/news/for-red-abalone-resisting-ocean-acidification-starts-with-mom How Giant Kelp May Respond to Climate Change /climate/news/how-giant-kelp-may-respond-climate-change <p>When a marine heat wave hit California’s coast in 2014, it brought ocean temperatures that were high for Northern California but fairly normal for a Southern California summer. Much of the giant kelp in the north died in the heat wave, while southern populations survived.</p> November 13, 2019 - 3:04pm Katherine E Kerlin /climate/news/how-giant-kelp-may-respond-climate-change Climate Change Could Shrink Oyster Habitat in California /climate/news/climate-change-could-shrink-oyster-habitat-california <p>Ocean acidification is bad news for shellfish, making it harder for them to form their calcium-based shells. But several other factors related to climate change could also make California bays less hospitable to shelled organisms like oysters, which are a key part of the food web.</p> <p>Changes to water temperature and chemistry resulting from human-caused climate change could shrink the prime habitat and farming locations for oysters in California bays, according to a new study from the °ÅÀÖÊÓƵ, Davis.</p> August 05, 2019 - 1:54pm Katherine E Kerlin /climate/news/climate-change-could-shrink-oyster-habitat-california Experts: Climate Change and Water /climate/news/experts-climate-change-and-water <p>The following sources from the °ÅÀÖÊÓƵ, Davis, are available to talk with media about <a href="https://climatechange.ucdavis.edu/">climate change </a>impacts and solutions related to water.&nbsp;</p> August 27, 2018 - 3:38pm Katherine E Kerlin /climate/news/experts-climate-change-and-water