Jump to content
Sign in to follow this  
Ladywriter

Ocean's 'forests' are being lost much more quickly than trees on land

Recommended Posts

John Bruno isn't attending the U.N. climate talks being held in Bali, Indonesia, but he does have some advice for any delegates looking to take in the resort's famed reefs: enjoy it now, because if sea temperatures continue to rise, expect to see more — and more severe — disease outbreaks that wipe out corals.Bruno has the credentials to back up his advice. A marine biologist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, he co-authored two 2007 studies on rapid coral decline and on a link between coral disease and global warming.

One study found that coral coverage in the Indo-Pacific — an area stretching from Indonesia’s Sumatra island to French Polynesia — dropped 20 percent in the past two decades. That rate is much higher than Bruno's team had expected.

Moreover, 600 square miles of reefs disappeared since the 1960s, the study found, and the losses were just as bad in Australia’s well-protected Great Barrier Reef as they were in marine reserves in the Philippines, where funding protection is problematic.

Bruno suspected warming ocean temperatures were playing a big role and the second study — which focused on the Great Barrier Reef — provided a strong connection.

That study compared new sea temperature data to six years of reef health surveys. The team found a strong correlation between white syndrome, a potentially fatal disease, and warmer waters.

"Our results suggest that climate change could be increasing the severity of disease in the ocean, leading to a decline in the health of marine ecosystems and the loss of the resources and services humans derive from them," the team concluded.

Unusually warm waters can also cause coral "bleaching," where microscopic algae that live within the corals' tissue and provide it with most of its nutrition are literally expelled. In the most severe cases, that literally kills entire coral colonies.

Reefs as forests

Even before any warming impact, reefs have long been stressed by runoff from farms, human sewage and fishing practices — including the use of dynamite to stun and then capture reef fish for the aquarium trade.

"At least half of the world’s living reefs were lost during the latter half of the 20th century," Bruno notes.

He and other experts fear that another third could be gone in 30 years.

For Bruno, coral reefs don't get the credit they deserve. He compares them to forests in that both create a complex ecosystem that is home to thousands of associated plants and animals.

Covering just one percent of the ocean floor, reefs are far less common than rainforests, he notes, and yet "we are losing reef-building corals globally at a rate of about one percent a year, which is about twice the rate of tropical rainforest loss."

Three quarters of all reefs are in the vulnerable Indo-Pacific, where they provide shelter for island communities and are a key source of income, mostly from the benefits of fishing and tourism.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22028590/

crown-of-thorns starfish


                                               gallery_3_22_21209.jpg

                                               Look at the flowers

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites


Sign in to follow this  

×
×
  • Create New...