Save reefs to rescue all ecosystems

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Morrison, Tiffany H.;Hughes, Terry P.;Adger, W. Neil;Brown, Katrina;Barnett, Jon;Lemos, Maria Carmen;Huitema, Dave;Huchery, Cindy;Chaigneau, Tomas;Turner, Rachel;Hettiarachchi, Missaka
Abstract

[Extract:] All the coral reefs in the world could be gone by 2070 if global heating continues on its current path. Since 1998, heatwaves have bleached or killed corals in more than 90% of reefs listed as World Heritage sites worldwide (including in the Galapagos Islands, Hawaii and Australia) (see ‘Under pressure’). In the Great Barrier Reef, the world’s largest reef system, half of the corals died in 2016 and 2017 alone. Coral reefs cover only 0.5% of the ocean floor, but they support almost 30% of the world’s marine fish species. Their loss has huge implications for biodiversity and for the roughly 400 million people who depend on them for work, food and protection from waves, storms and floods in more than 100 countries across Australasia, southeast Asia, the Indo-Pacific, the Middle East, the Caribbean and the tropical Americas. We think a change in approach is urgently needed from the slew of groups striving to safeguard reefs: ecologists, conservationists, non-governmental organizations, national and regional policymakers, and philanthropists. Such groups must address the causes of reef ecosystem decline — not just focus on biodiversity, or on trying to restore a particular reef or region to some idealized ‘prior state’, for instance by establishing marine parks.

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Nature

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573

ISBN/ISSN

1476-4687

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Pages Count

4

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Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

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DOI

10.1038/d41586-019-02737-8