Abstract
Factors causing global degradation of coral reefs are examined briefly as a
basis for predicting the likely consequences of increases in these factors.
The earlier consensus was that widespread but localized damage from natural
factors such as storms, and direct anthropogenic effects such as increased
sedimentation, pollution and exploitation, posed the largest immediate threat
to coral reefs. Now truly global factors associated with accelerating Global
Climate Change are either damaging coral reefs or have the potential to
inflict greater damage in the immediate future: e.g. increases in coral
bleaching and mortality, and reductions in coral calcification due to changes
in sea-water chemistry with increasing carbon dioxide concentrations. Rises in
sea level will probably disrupt human communities and their cultures by making
coral cays uninhabitable, whereas coral reefs will sustain minimal damage from
the rise in sea level. The short-term (decades) prognosis is indeed grim, with
major reductions almost certain in the extent and biodiversity of coral reefs,
and severe disruptions to cultures and economies dependent on reef resources.
The long-term (centuries to millennia) prognosis is more encouraging because
coral reefs have remarkable resilience to severe disruption and will probably
show this resilience in the future when climate changes either stabilize or
reverse.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
182 articles.
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