Indian Ocean May Lose Coral Islands In 50 Years, Scientist
Says Wednesday,
May
12, 2004
 |
Rising
temperatures in the Indian Ocean due to global warming
are threatening to kill off most of the ocean's coral
islands in the next 50 years, a marine scientist said
Monday.
|
"We
have reason to believe that if climate changes continue
due to the carbon dioxide that is being pumped into the
atmosphere, the temperatures at ground level and in the
oceans will go up," said Carl Lundin, head of the marine
program at the Swiss-based World Conservation Union. "So
virtually all the coralline islands have a decent chance
of disappearing in 50 years," he added.
Coral
reefs, the most diverse and productive communities on earth,
are found in warm, clear and shallow tropical oceans, and
have multiple functions, including providing food and shelter
to ocean animals and protecting the shore from erosion.
Coral reefs are sensitive to environmental conditions such
as rising temperatures, which cause bleaching and eventual
death, Reuters reported yesterday. Coralline islands are
made of exposed fossil reefs and are vulnerable to erosion.
According
to Lundin, sustained warming of ocean currents which followed
the El Nino effect in 1998 resulted in bleaching and widespread
damage to corals in the Indian Ocean. This triggered the
death of between 50 and 98 percent of coral reefs in a region
stretching from northern Mozambique to Eritrea to Indonesia.
There has been some recovery among islands — for instance,
the coral islands in the Seychelles have regained between
2 and 20 percent of their cover, said Lundin.
Lundin
attributed the gradual recovery of the coral islands of
Seychelles to time and the lack of negative development
(George Thande, Reuters/Planet Ark, May 11).
Copyright. National Journal Group. Year 2004.