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Aug.
7, 2007 CHAPEL HILL
– Corals in the central and
western Pacific ocean are dying faster than previously thought, The reefs are
disappearing at a rate of one
percent per year, a decline that began decades earlier than expected,
the
researchers discovered. Historically, coral cover, a measure of reef
health,
hovered around 50 percent. Today, only about 2 percent of reefs in the
Indo-Pacific have coral cover close to the historical baseline. “We have
already lost half of the world’s
reef-building corals,” said John Bruno, lead study author and
associate
professor of marine ecology and conservation in the department of
marine
sciences in UNC-Chapel Hill’s The results were
published Aug. 8, 2007, in
the online journal PLoS One. The
study provides the first regional-scale and long-term analysis of coral
loss in
the region, where relatively little was known about patterns of reef
loss. The Indo-Pacific
contains 75 percent of the
world’s coral reefs and has the highest coral diversity in
the world. High
coral cover reefs in the Indo-Pacific ocean were common until a few
decades
ago, the researchers found. Bruno and
Elizabeth Selig, a graduate student
in the Coral cover
declined from 40 percent in the
early 1980s to approximately 20 percent by 2003, the researchers found.
This
consistent pattern of decline across the entire Indo-Pacific indicates
that
coral loss is a global phenomenon, likely due in part to large-scale
stressors
such as climate change. But for Bruno and Selig, one of the most
surprising
results was that coral loss was just as extensive on some of regions
most
intensely managed reefs. The results of the
study have significant
implications for policy makers and resource managers searching for ways
to
reverse coral loss. “We can do a far better job of developing
technologies and
implementing smart policies that will offset climate change,”
Bruno said. “We
can also work on mitigating the effects of other stressors to corals
including
nutrient pollution and destructive fishing practices.” Although reefs
cover less than one percent of
the ocean globally, they play an integral role in coastal communities,
Bruno
said. They provide economic benefits through fisheries and tourism and
serve
invaluable services like buffering from storms. When corals die, these
benefits
quickly disappear. Coral disease, predators, rising ocean temperatures
due to
climate change, nutrient pollution, destructive fishing practices and
sediment
run-off from coastal development can all destroy reef communities. “Indo-Pacific
reefs have played an important
economic and cultural role in the region for hundreds of years and
their
continued decline could mean the loss of millions of dollars in
fisheries and
tourism,” Selig said. The research was
funded by a grant by the
National Science Foundation and the Environmental Protection
Agency’s Science
to Achieve Results program. ##
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