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Marine species loss
is
accelerating and threatening human well-being, according to a report
published
in the November 3, 2006 issue of the journal Science
published by AAAS,
the nonprofit science society. "Species have been
disappearing from ocean ecosystems and this trend has recently been
accelerating," said lead author Boris Worm. "Now we begin to see some
of the consequences. For example, if the long-term trend continues, all
fish
and seafood species are projected to collapse within my lifetime -- by
2048." Worm is an assistant professor of marine conservation biology at
In the paper "Impact
of
Biodiversity Loss on Ocean Ecosystem Services," an international team
of
ecologists and economists studied the role marine biodiversity plays in
maintaining ecosystem services, which are those goods and functions
that are
essential for the growing human population. "Worm and colleagues
have
provided the first comprehensive assessment of the state of ecosystem
services
provided by the biodiversity of the world's oceans to humanity," said Science International Managing Editor
Andrew Sugden. "The news is both bad and good. "The strength of
this paper
lies in the breadth of the array of information the authors used for
their
analysis; they not only used new experimental data and recent data,
they also
delved into historical archives to assess the impact of humans on
marine
ecosystem over decades and centuries," Sugden said. "At this point,"
Worm
said, "29 percent of fish and seafood species have collapsed -- that is
their catch has declined by 90 percent. It is a very clear trend, and
it is
accelerating. We don't have to use models to understand this trend; it
is based
on all the available data." Researchers also
determined that
the problem is much greater than losing a key source of food. Damage to
the
oceans impact not only fisheries, but the ocean ecosystem's overall
productivity and stability. Specific services that have declined
involve the
maintenance of water quality by biological filtering, the provision of
nursery
habitats and the protection of shorelines by marine species. The loss
of marine
diversity also appeared to increase the risks of beach closures,
harmful algal
blooms (red tide, for example), oxygen depletion, fish kills and
coastal
flooding. "The good news is
that it is
not too late to turn things around," Worm said. The scientists studied
48
areas worldwide that have been protected to improve marine
biodiversity.
"We see that diversity of species recovered dramatically, and with it
the
ecosystem's productivity and stability." Researchers studied
a variety of
information in four meta-analyses, progressing from local to regional
and
global scales. First, they analyzed
32 marine
experiments that manipulated species diversity on small, local scales,
and
monitored the effects. Second, researchers tracked the 1,000-year-long
history
of change in species diversity and associated services across 12
coastal
regions around the world. These included Chesapeake, Delaware,
Massachusetts,
Galveston, San Francisco Bay and Pamlico Sound (all U.S.), The Bay of
Fundy and
Gulf of St. Lawrence (Canada), The Adriatic, Baltic and North Seas
(Europe), as
well as Moreton Bay (Australia). Sources included archives, fishery
records,
sediment cores and archeological data. Then, the team
compiled global
fisheries catch data from 64 large marine ecosystems to test for the
effects of
large-scale species loss on fisheries-related services. They used the
fisheries
database compiled by the United Nations Food and Agriculture
Organization and
the Sea Around Us Project at the Fisheries Centre, The researchers were
surprised to
find very similar relationships between biodiversity change and
ecosystem
services at scales ranging from small square-meter plots to entire
ocean
basins, Worm said. "This suggests that small-scale experiments can be
used
to predict large-scale ocean change. "Through this
research, it
became clear to me that we hardly appreciate living on a blue planet,"
Worm said. "The oceans define our planet, and their fate may to a large
extent determine our fate, now and in the future."
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