by rising CO 2 . While many species will apparently do fine, even thrive in
an  acidified   ocean,  lots    of  others  will    not.    Some    of  the organisms   that    have
been     shown   to  be  vulnerable,     like    clownfish   and     Pacific     oysters,    are
familiar    from    aquariums   and the dinner  table;  others  are less    charismatic
(or  tasty)  but     probably    more    essential   to  marine  ecosystems.    Emiliania
huxleyi,    for example,    is  a   single-celled   phytoplankton—a coccolithophore
—that   surrounds   itself  with    tiny    calcite plates. Under   magnification,  it
looks    like    some    kind    of  crazy   crafts  project:    a   soccer  ball    covered     in
buttons.     It  is  so  common  at  certain     times   of  year    that    it  turns   vast
sections    of  the seas    a   milky   white,  and it  forms   the base    of  many    marine
food    chains. Limacina    helicina    is  a   species of  pteropod,   or  “sea    butterfly,”
that    resembles   a   winged  snail.  It  lives   in  the Arctic  and is  an  important
food    source  for many    much    larger  animals,    including   herring,    salmon,
and  whales.     Both    of  these   species     appear  to  be  highly  sensitive   to
acidification:  in  one mesocosm    experiment  Emiliania   huxleyi disappeared
altogether  from    enclosures  with    elevated    CO 2    levels.