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      From: United Nations Environment Programme Published February 22, 2008 09:25 AM
 Warmer World May Mean Less Fish  Global Warming Adding to Pollution and Over-Harvesting Impacts on the 
    World's Key Fishing Grounds Says New UNEP - "In Dead Water" - Report
 Monaco/Nairobi, 22 February 2008 - Climate change is emerging as the latest 
    threat to the world's dwindling fish stocks a new report by the UN 
    Environment Programme (UNEP) suggests.
 
 At least three quarters of the globe's key fishing grounds may become 
    seriously impacted by changes in circulation as a result of the ocean's 
    natural pumping systems fading and falling they suggest.
 
 These natural pumps, dotted at sites across the world including the Arctic 
    and the Mediterranean, bring nutrients to fisheries and keep them healthy by 
    flushing out wastes and pollution.
 
 The impacts of rising emissions on the marine world are unlikely to end 
    there. Higher sea surface temperatures over the coming decades threaten to 
    bleach and kill up to 80 per cent of the globe's coral reefs-major tourist 
    attractions, natural sea defences and also nurseries for fish.
 
 Meanwhile there is growing concern that carbon dioxide emissions will 
    increase the acidity of seas and oceans. This in turn may impact calcium and 
    shell-forming marine life including corals but also tiny ones such as 
    planktonic organisms at the base of the food chain.
 
 The findings come in a new rapid response report entitled "In Dead Water" 
    which has for the first time mapped the multiple impacts of pollution; alien 
    infestations; over-exploitation and climate change on the seas and oceans.
 
 "The worst concentration of cumulative impacts of climate change with 
    existing pressures of over-harvest, bottom trawling, invasive species 
    infestations, coastal development and pollution appear to be concentrated in 
    10-15 per cent of the oceans," says the report.
 
 This 10-15 per cent of the oceans is far higher than had previously been 
    supposed and is "concurrent with today's most important fishing grounds" 
    including the estimated 7.5 per cent deemed to be the most economically 
    valuable fishing areas of the world, it adds.
 
 The report, the work of UNEP scientists in collaboration with universities 
    and institutes in Europe and the United States, was launched today during 
    UNEP's Governing Council/Global Ministerial Environment Forum taking place 
    in Monaco.
 
 It is the largest gathering of environment ministers since the climate 
    convention conference in Indonesia just over two months ago where 
    governments agreed the Bali Road Map aimed at delivering a deep and decisive 
    climate regime for post 2012.
 
 Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and UNEP Executive Director, 
    said:" The theme of the Governing Council is 'Mobilizing Finance for the 
    Climate Challenge for trillions of dollars can flow into climate-friendly 
    energies and technologies if government's can provide the right kind of 
    enabling market mechanisms and fiscal incentives".
 
 "It is sometimes important to remind ourselves why we need to accelerate 
    these transformations towards a Green Economy. In Dead Water has uniquely 
    mapped the impact of several damaging and persistent stresses on fisheries. 
    It also lays on top of these the likely impacts of climate change from 
    dramatic alternations in ocean circulation affecting perhaps a three quarter 
    of key fishing grounds up to the emerging concern of ocean acidification," 
    said Mr Steiner.
 
 "Climate change threatens coastal infrastructure, food and water supplies 
    and the health of people across the world. It is clear from this report and 
    others that it will add significantly to pressures on fish stocks. This is 
    as much a development and economic issue as it is an environmental one. 
    Millions of people including many in developing countries derive their 
    livelihoods from fishing while around 2.6 billion people get their protein 
    from seafood," he said.
 
 The report comes in wake of findings issued last week by a team led by the 
    National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis which estimates that 
    over 40 per cent of the world's oceans have been heavily impacted by humans 
    and that only four per cent remain relatively pristine.
 
 It also comes amid concern that sea bird chicks in the North Sea may be 
    being choked after being fed on a diet of snake pipefish-a very bony 
    species. Over the past five years snake pipefish numbers have boomed a 
    meeting of the Zoological Society in London was told last week.
 
 One reason for their sharp increase in numbers might be changes in ocean 
    currents bringing the fish into North Sea waters, the experts suggest.
 
 The new UNEP report has been compiled by researchers including ones at 
    UNEP's GRID Arendal centre; UNEP's World Conservation Monitoring Centre and 
    UNEP's Division of Early Warning and Assessment.
 
 It draws on a wide range of new and emerging science including the latest 
    assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change-the 2,000 
    plus panel of scientists established by UNEP and the World Meteorological 
    Organisation.
 
 Other contributions have come from organizations and institutions including 
    the University of Plymouth; the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research; the 
    University of British Columbia; the Institute of Zoology; Princeton 
    University; the University of Barcelona and the Sustainable Europe Research 
    Institute.
 
 In Dead Water Key Findings
 
 - Half the world's catch is caught along Continental shelves in an area of 
    less than 7.5 per cent of the globe's seas and oceans.
 
 - An area of 10-15 per cent of the world's seas and oceans cover most of the 
    commercial fishing grounds.
 
 - 80 per cent to 100 per cent of the world's coral reefs may suffer annual 
    bleaching events by 2080 under global warming scenarios.
 
 - Those at particular risk are in the Western Pacific; the Indian Ocean; the 
    Persian Gulf; the Middle East and in the Caribbean
 
 - Over 90 per cent of the world's temperate and tropical coasts will be 
    heavily impacted by 2050. Over 80 per cent of marine pollution comes from 
    the land. Marine areas at particular risk of increased pollution are 
    Southeast and East Asia.
 
 - Increasing concentrations of C02 in the atmosphere are likely to be 
    mirrored by increasing acidification of the marine environment.
 
 - Increasing acidification may reduce the availability of calcium carbonates 
    in sea water, including a key one known as aragonite which is used by a 
    variety of organisms for shell-building.
 
 - Cold-water and deep water corals could be affected by acidification by 
    2050 and shell-building organisms throughout the Southern Ocean and into the 
    sub-Arctic Pacific Ocean by 2100.
 
 - Climate change may slow down the ocean thermohaline circulation and thus 
    the continental shelf "flushing and cleaning" mechanisms, known as dense 
    shelf water cascading,over the next 100 years. These processes are crucial 
    to water quality and nutrient cycling and deep water production in at least 
    75 per cent of the world's major fishing grounds.
 
 - Dead zones, area of de-oxygenated water, are increasing as a result of 
    pollution from urban and agriculture areas. There are an estimated 200 
    temporary or permanent 'dead zones' up from around 150 in 2003.
 
 - Up to 80 per cent of the world's primary fish catch species are exploited 
    beyond or close to their harvesting capacity. Advances in technology, 
    alongside subsidies, means the world's fishing capacity is 2.5 times bigger 
    that that needed to sustainably harvest fisheries.
 
 - Bottom trawling is among the most damaging and unsustainable fishing 
    practices at the scales often seen today
 
 - Alien invasive species, which can out-compete and dislodge native ones, 
    are increasingly associated with the polluted, overharvested and damaged 
    fishing grounds. The report shows that the concentration of 'aliens' matches 
    with some precision the world's major shipping routes.
 
 Christian Nellemann, who headed up the rapid response team that compiled the 
    report, said: "We are already seeing evidence from a number of studies that 
    increasing sea temperatures are causing changes in the distribution of 
    marine life".
 
 Some of these changes are being found from the Continuous Plankton Recorder 
    survey of the Northeast Atlantic.
 
 Warmer water copepod species or crustaceans have moved northward by around 
    1,000km during the later half of the 20th century with the patterns 
    continuing into the 21st century.
 
 "Further evidence of this warming signal is seen in the appearance of a 
    Pacific planktonic plant in the Northwest Atlantic for this first time in 
    800,000 years by transfer across the top of Canada due to the rapid melting 
    of the Arctic in 1998," said Dr. Nellemann. "We are getting more and more 
    alarming signals of dramatic changes in the oceans. It is like turning a big 
    tanker around. Our ability to change course and reduce emissions in the near 
    future will be paramount to success".
 
 The link between healthy and productive fishing grounds and ocean 
    circulation or 'dense shelf water cascading' is in some ways only now 
    emerging.
 
 Three years ago the Hotspot Ecosystem Research on the Margins of European 
    Seas of which UNEP is part, documented such a phenomenon in the Gulf of 
    Lions in the north-western Mediterranean.
 
 A quantity of water equal to two years-worth of the river discharge from all 
    rivers flowing into the Mediterranean is, in four months, transported from 
    the Gulf of Lions to the deep Western Mediterranean via the Cap de Creyus 
    canyon.
 
 It has a critical impact on the population of the heavily harvested deep sea 
    shrimp Aristeus antennatus, the crevette rouge, by bringing food that in 
    turn triggers a sharp increase in young shrimp resulting in plentiful 
    catches three to five years after the 'cascading' event.
 
 "Imagine what will happen if climate change slows down or stops these 
    natural food transport and "flushing" effects in waters that are often 
    already polluted, heavily fished, damaged and stressed", said Dr. Nellemann. 
    "We are gambling with our food supply".
 
 Stefan Hain of UNEP's World Conservation Monitoring Centre, said it was 
    critical that existing stresses were also addressed too in order to conserve 
    fish stocks and coral reefs in a climate constrained world.
 
 He said there was growing evidence that coral reefs recover from bleaching 
    better in cleaner, less polluted waters.
 
 Dr Hain cited monitoring of corals around the main Seychelles island of Mahé 
    which were among corals world-wide that suffered from the high sea surface 
    temperatures of the late 1990s. Here coral reefs recovery rates have varied 
    between five to 70 per cent.
 
 "Coral reefs recovering faster are generally those living in Marine 
    Protected Areas and coastal waters where the levels of pollution, dredging 
    and other kinds of human-induced disturbance are considered low," he said.
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