In Hot Water: Climate Change Harms Hot Spots of Ocean Life

Translator

Editor

Kamis, 1 Januari 1970 07:00 WIB

livescience.com

TEMPO.CO, Washington - The six ocean hot spots that teem with the biggest mix of species are also getting hit hardest by global warming and industrial fishing, a new study finds.


An international team looked at more than 2,100 species of fish, seabirds, marine mammals and even tiny plankton to calculate Earth's hot spots of marine biodiversity.


These underwater super-zoos are in patches of ocean that are overfished and warming fast, and these pressures hurt the lush life there, according to a study appearing in Wednesday's journal Science Advances .


"In those hot spots, the changes are already happening," says study co-author Andre Chiaradia, a senior scientist and penguin expert at the Phillip Island Nature Parks in Australia. "They are the most at risk."


Several outside marine and climate scientists praised the work, saying it showed the importance of protecting these areas and reducing fishing.


"Biodiversity and fisheries are humanity's legacy" that should be preserved, marine ecologist Maria Vernet of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography said in an email. She wasn't part of the research.


While scientists in the past have identified key areas of biodiversity, the new work is more detailed. Researchers found the liveliest ocean hot spot also happens to be where the science of evolution sprouted: the Pacific Ocean off the central South American coast. It includes the area around the Galapagos Islands and goes back to "our good friend (Charles) Darwin. When he went there, he got amazed," Chiaradia said.


Other hot spots include the southwestern Atlantic Ocean off Argentina; the western Indian Ocean off the African coast; the central western Pacific Ocean surrounding Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines; the southwestern Pacific off Australia's southern and eastern coast; and the Oceania region of the Pacific around the international date line. Four of the six hot spots are in the Pacific; all are either in the southern hemisphere or just north of the equator.


"What makes this biodiversity? It's the isolation," Chiardia said. "On land, we have kangaroos and weird animals like the platypus. And in the ocean it's not different."


The ocean is home to Australian sea dragons, a fish related to the seahorse that resemble mythical dragons and sometimes even have yellow and purple markings on their bodies.


These hot spots also tend to be places where the ocean waters churn more, Chiardia said.


Penguins, which are near the top of the food chain, are a good example of the impact of changing water temperatures and currents. Warm El Nino waters have decimated Galapagos penguins and the population of southern African penguins has dropped by about 90 percent in just 20 years, Chiardia said.


AP




Related News

Indonesia Joins Hand with UNDP, WHO to Launch Green Climate Fund

11 jam lalu

Indonesia Joins Hand with UNDP, WHO to Launch Green Climate Fund

The GCF project in Indonesia will be designed to increase the climate resilience of health services through climate adaptation and mitigation.

Read More

Battling Climate Change, Japan Looks to Seagrass for Carbon Capture

7 hari lalu

Battling Climate Change, Japan Looks to Seagrass for Carbon Capture

Japan's most recent annual Greenhouse Gas Inventory factored the carbon absorbed by seagrass and seaweed beds into its calculations.

Read More

Climate Change is Killing Us - in More Ways Than One

8 hari lalu

Climate Change is Killing Us - in More Ways Than One

We've all heard about climate change's effect on our planet, but what about its catastrophic impact on human health?

Read More

Is Southeast Asia's Healthcare Workforce Ready for Climate Change?

9 hari lalu

Is Southeast Asia's Healthcare Workforce Ready for Climate Change?

Across region, it's never been more critical to cultivate a resilient healthcare workforce capable of addressing climate-induced public health issues.

Read More

Indonesia to Submit Second NDC for Paris Agreement on August 2024

10 hari lalu

Indonesia to Submit Second NDC for Paris Agreement on August 2024

Each country member of the Paris Agreement must submit a second NDC no later than March 2025. Indonesia plans to submit it in August 2024.

Read More

Dealing a Knockout Blow to Dengue

10 hari lalu

Dealing a Knockout Blow to Dengue

Deadly diseases such as dengue fever carried by mosquitoes are spreading. A bacteria-based solution could be key to fighting back.

Read More

UIN Sunan Kalijaga Professor Muhammad Amin Abdullah on the Relation between Religion and the Environment

12 hari lalu

UIN Sunan Kalijaga Professor Muhammad Amin Abdullah on the Relation between Religion and the Environment

UIN Sunan Kalijaga professor Muhammad Amin Abdullah explains Islamic environmental jurisprudence in relation to climate change.

Read More

Coral Reefs Suffer Fourth Global Bleaching Event, NOAA Says

16 hari lalu

Coral Reefs Suffer Fourth Global Bleaching Event, NOAA Says

Along coastlines from Australia to Kenya to Mexico, many of the world's colorful coral reefs have turned a ghostly white.

Read More

Indonesia Expects WWF to Build Political Consensus on Climate Change

31 hari lalu

Indonesia Expects WWF to Build Political Consensus on Climate Change

Indonesia's BMKG is optimistic that the 10th World Water Forum (WWF) in Bali will generate political consensus on climate change.

Read More

New Fish Invade the Adriatic Sea, Threatening Local Species

41 hari lalu

New Fish Invade the Adriatic Sea, Threatening Local Species

Due to climate change and increased maritime traffic, the parrotfish, along with around 50 new species, has spread to the Adriatic, threatening the na

Read More