| Cut Greenhouse Gases to Save Coral Reefs - Scientists
US: August 28, 2008
WASHINGTON - To keep coral reefs from being eaten away by increasingly
acidic oceans, humans need to limit the amount of climate-warming greenhouse
gases in the atmosphere, a panel of marine scientists said on Wednesday.
"The most logical and critical action to address the impacts of ocean
acidification on coral reefs is to stabilize atmospheric carbon dioxide
concentration," the scientists said in a document called the Honolulu
Declaration, for release at a US conference on coral reefs in Hawaii.
Ocean acidification is another threat to corals caused by global warming,
along with rising sea levels, higher sea surface temperatures and coral
bleaching, the scientists said.
Coral reefs are a "sentinel ecosystem," a sign that the environment is
changing, said one of the experts, Billy Causey of the US National Marine
Sanctuary Program.
"Although ocean acidification is affecting the health of our oceans, the
same thing -- increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere -- is going to in
fact be affecting terrestrial environments also," Causey said by telephone
from Hawaii.
Coral reefs offer economic and environmental benefits to millions of people,
including coastal protection from waves and storms and as sources of food,
pharmaceuticals, jobs and revenue, the declaration said.
But corals are increasingly threatened by warming sea surface temperatures
as well as ocean acidification.
Oceans are getting more acidic because they have been absorbing some 525
billion tonnes of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide over the last two
centuries, about one-third of all human-generated carbon dioxide for that
period.
The carbon dioxide combines with sea water to form carbonic acid.
Marine researchers have long recognized acidification in deep ocean water
far from land, but a study published this year in the journal Science found
this same damaging phenomenon on the Pacific North American continental
shelf from Mexico to Canada, and quite likely elsewhere around the globe.
The water became so corrosive that it started dissolving the shells and
skeletons of starfish, clams and corals.
Stabilizing carbon dioxide emissions was the Honolulu Declaration's top
long-term recommendation. The key short-term recommendation was to nurture
coral reefs that seem to have natural resilience against acidification.
This could be adopted immediately by managers of protected marine areas,
Causey said.
The Honolulu Declaration will be presented to the United Nations and to
other global, regional and national forums.
Story by Deborah Zabarenko, Environment Correspondent
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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