Prima Contact Harta
 Română  English
 
 
Prima / CADRUL NAŢIONAL / Materiale informaţionale / Noutăţi / Climate change will lead to annual coral bleaching, UN-supported study predicts
Climate change will lead to annual coral bleaching, UN-supported study predicts
05.01.2017  
   
imprimare

 

http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=55913#.WIO81LmE195

 

If current trends continue and the world fails to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, nearly all of the world's coral reefs will suffer severe bleaching - the gravest threat to one of the Earth's most important ecosystems - on annual basis, the United Nations environment agency today reported.

 

The finding is part of a study funded by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) and partners, which reviewed new climate change projections to predict which corals will be affected first and at what rate. The report is published in the journal Nature Scientific Reports .

Researchers found that the reefs in Taiwan and the Turks and Caicos archipelago will be among the first to experience annual bleaching, followed by reefs off the coast of Bahrain, in Chile and in French Polynesia.

Calling the predictions "a treasure trove" for environmentalists, the head of the UN agency, Erik Solheim said the projects allow conservationists and governments to prioritize the protection reef protection.

"The projections show us where we still have time to act before it's too late," Mr. Solheim said.

On average, the reefs will start to undergo annual bleaching starting in 2043, according to the study. Without the required minimum of five years to regenerate, the annual occurrences will have a deadly effect on the corals and disrupt the ecosystems which they support.

However, if Governments act on emission reduction pledges made in the Paris Agreement, which calls on countries to combat climate change and limit global temperature rise to below 2 degrees Celsius, the corals would have another 11 years to adapt to the warming seas.

Between 2014 and 2016, the world witnessed the longest global bleaching event recorded. Among the casualties was the Great Barrier Reef, with 90 per cent of it bleached and 20 per cent of the reef's coral killed.

 

 


Plasează articolul în:
google Delicious Digg Yahoo Facebook Twitter Netvibes linkedin
 
 
Prima   Contact   Harta
vizitatori: 3304581
sus
B2B and B2C solutions , Branding & Graphic Design Services,Website Design and Development , E-Commerce Systems,Software Application Architecture and Development,Multimedia solutions , 2D/3D modeling & animation solutions,Video & Post Production Creat de Trimaran
 
SCHIMBAREA CLIMEI – esenţa fenomenului   /   CADRUL INTERNAŢIONAL   /   CADRUL NAŢIONAL   /   CERCETĂRI ŞI MODELARE   /   DOCUMENTE   /   UIPM
Tel. +373 22 232247   /  Fax. +373 22 232247

Adresa: str. Alexandru cel Bun 51A, mun. Chisinau, Republica Moldova