Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Resort developers should pay attention to these two words - Coral Bleaching


It's happening, and it's worldwide. The next 10 years will see a continued near shore degradation of reefs that once supported a wide variety of marine life...and tourism dollars.

Resorts and new developers can either start building now for this inevitable tide of bad news with the addition of marine friendly artificial reefs or be caught short later when water based tourists leave to explore sites that still contain viable wildlife:

Three-quarters of the world's reefs are at risk according to a report.

By 2050 virtually all of the world's coral reefs – from the waters of the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean to Australia – will be in danger, the report warns. The consequences – especially for countries such as the Philippines or Haiti which depend on the reefs will be severe.

"These are dire results," said Lauretta Burke, a lead author of Reefs at Risk, a collaborative effort led by the World Resources Institute in Washington and 25 other research organisations.

The reefs of south-east Asia are in the most acute peril – with 95% on the danger list; 75% of the reefs in the Caribbean are also threatened, including all those in Florida, Haiti and Jamaica. But even Australia, where reefs are protected, will be in the danger zone by the middle of the century if climate change is left unchecked.

Jane Lubchenco, who heads the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, described the scenario as a "perfect storm" of global and local threats. "Make no mistake. This is a critical time for ocean eco-systems in general but especially for coral reefs," she said.

Burke and other experts at the release of the report in Washington said the assault could be reversible. "Coral reefs are resilient and do rebound from these pressures when local threats are kept low," Burke said.

But Lubchenco warned: "It will take a Herculean effort to reverse the current trajectory and leave a healthy ecosystem to our children and grandchildren."

Article here.

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