A report carried out by the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration points to the alarming fact
that half of all US
coral reefs are in poor health and that responsibility belongs to human beings.
Today will take place the 11th
International Coral Reef Symposium, which will be hosted at The Broward County
Convention Center. Scientist, policy experts and conservationists from 150
countries will gather in order to discuss about coral reef conservation and
protection.
Issued today at the International
Coral Reef Symposium in Fort Lauderdale, the
report refers to the 15 federally managed shallow-water coral preserves in the
Pacific and Caribbean. It is based on survey
answers from coral reef administrators and on reports for more that 250
scientists, says Jenny Waddell, NOAA marine biologist.
Experts say reefs located nearby
cities were discovered in poorer condition, destroyed by garbage, overfishing
and pollution. "Human impacts are making the big difference," affirmed
NOAA's Timothy Keeney, co-chair of the U.S. Coral Reef Task Force. "Humans
are the most invasive species of all."
Among the report’s findings, it
has been discovered that seafood species are in deplorable state and that
almost 90% of all reef in some Caribbean areas
were wretched in 2005 by bleaching, losing their color, and by hurricanes.
Specialists approximate that 20
percent to 50 percent of the world's reef has been damaged in the past 40
years. Coral reefs feel even the slight variations in water temperature and
global warming has a destructive impact on them.
|