A
 recent study of a unique natural laboratory created by scientists in 
the Mediterranean Sea has shown that the number of single-celled 
organisms called Foraminifera found around volcanic carbon dioxide vents
 near Naples, Italy, has diminished from 24 species to only four. 
Scientists
 from the University of Plymouth in the United Kingdom and the 
University of Santa Catarina in Brazil discovered that similar losses in
 many forms of marine life, especially organisms with calcium carbonate 
shells like Foraminifera, are linked to rising ocean acidity, which has 
occurred from the excessive absorption of carbon dioxide and has the 
effect of lowering the water’s pH levels. 
Suggesting that 
over-acidification has been responsible for wide-scale extinctions in 
the past, study co-author Dr. Jason Hall-Spencer stated, “A tipping 
point occurs at … pH 7.8. This is the pH level predicted for the end of 
this century… The big concern for me is that unless we curb carbon 
emissions, we risk mass extinctions, degrading coastal waters and 
encouraging outbreaks of toxic jellyfish and algae." 
Many thanks
 Dr. Hall-Spencer and other British and Brazilian colleagues, for 
reminding of our dire need to minimize greenhouse gas emissions to 
preserve our life-supporting oceans. 
With Heaven's grace, may we
 accelerate effective planet-saving actions in all corners of the world.
 During a May 2009 videoconference in Togo, Supreme Master Ching Hai 
pointed out the imbalances already occurring in our marine environments,
 suggesting at the same time how to reverse these dangerous effects. 
Supreme Master Ching Hai:
 Balanced marine ecosystems are extremely important, as more than 
two-thirds of the planet is covered by oceans. They provide half of the 
world’s oxygen  and play a major part in regulating the global climate. 
So,
 life on Earth truly depends very much on the ocean for survival. In 
addition, oceans also absorb atmospheric CO2 – carbon dioxide – which 
directly helps to cool our planet. 
From the oceans themselves, 
we are seeing warming temperatures, rising sea levels, increasing 
acidification and terrible levels of pollution. So global warming is 
affecting the oceans, which in turn is affecting the fish. 
This is 
an equally urgent situation as the one presented by livestock industry, 
and it has the exact same solution. Stop eating the flesh; stop killing 
for food; stop eating the fish. This will help restore the balance of 
both the ocean and land, immediately. 
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/08/100825093651.htm