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Scientists
Reveal First-Ever Global Map of Total Human Effect on Oceans
Thursday, February 14, 2008
More than 40 percent of
world's oceans heavily affected
Marine
ecosystems worldwide have been widely affected by human
activities.
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Credit:
NCEAS
More than 40 percent of the
world's oceans are heavily affected by human activities, and few
if any areas remain untouched, according to the first
global-scale study of human influence on marine ecosystems.
By overlaying maps of 17
different activities such as fishing, climate change and
pollution, the researchers have produced a composite map of the
toll that humans have exacted on the seas.
The work, published in this
week's issue of Science,
was conducted at the National Science Foundation (NSF)'s National
Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS) at the
University of California at Santa Barbara, and involved 19
scientists from a range of universities, NGOs, and government
agencies.
The study synthesized global
data on human impacts to marine ecosystems such as coral reefs,
seagrass beds, continental shelves and the deep ocean.
"This research is a
critically needed synthesis of the impact of human activity on
ocean ecosystems," said David Garrison, biological
oceanography program director at NSF. "The effort is likely
to be a model for assessing these effects at local and regional
scales."
Past studies have focused
largely on single activities or single ecosystems in isolation,
and rarely at the global scale. In this study the scientists were
able to look at the summed influence of human activities across
the entire ocean.
"This project allows us to
finally start to see the big picture of how humans are affecting
the oceans." said lead scientist Ben Halpern of NCEAS. "Our
results show that when these and other individual impacts are
summed up, the big picture looks much worse than I imagine most
people expected. It was certainly a surprise to me."
The study reports that the most
heavily affected waters in the world include large areas of the
North Sea, the South and East China Seas, the Caribbean Sea, the
east coast of North America, the Mediterranean Sea, the Red Sea,
the Persian Gulf, the Bering Sea and several regions in the
western Pacific. The least affected areas are largely near the
poles.
"Unfortunately, as polar
ice sheets disappear with warming global climate and human
activities spread into these areas, there is a great risk of
rapid degradation of these relatively pristine ecosystems,"
said Carrie Kappel, a scientist at NCEAS.
Human influence on the ocean
varies dramatically across various ecosystems. The most heavily
affected areas include coral reefs, seagrass beds, mangroves,
rocky reefs and shelves and seamounts. The least impacted
ecosystems are soft-bottom areas and open-ocean surface waters.
"There is definitely room
for hope," added Halpern. "With targeted efforts to
protect the chunks of the ocean that remain relatively pristine,
we have a good chance of preserving these areas in good
condition."
The research involved a
four-step process. First, the scientists developed techniques to
quantify and compare how different human activities affect each
marine ecosystem. For example, fertilizer runoff has been shown
to have a large effect on coral reefs but a much smaller one on
kelp forests.
Second, the researchers
gathered and processed global data on the distributions of marine
ecosystems and human influences.
Then the scientists combined
data from the first and second steps to determine "human
impact scores" for each location in the world.
Finally, using global estimates
of the condition of marine ecosystems from previous studies, the
researchers were able to ground-truth their impact scores.
Despite all this effort, the
authors acknowledge that their maps are still incomplete, because
many human activities are poorly studied or lack good data.
"Our hope is that as more
data become available, the maps will be refined and updated,"
said Fio Micheli, a scientist at Stanford University. "But
this will almost certainly create a more dire picture."
This study provides critical
information for evaluating where certain activities can continue
with little effect on the oceans, and where other activities
might need to be stopped or moved to less sensitive areas.
As management and conservation
of the oceans turns toward marine protected areas (MPAs),
ecosystem-based management (EBM) and ocean zoning to manage human
influence, such information will prove invaluable to managers and
policymakers.
"Conservation and
management groups have to decide where, when, and what to spend
their resources on," said Kimberly Selkoe, a scientist at
the University of Hawaii. "Whether one is interested in
protecting ocean wilderness, assessing which human activities
have the greatest impact, or prioritizing which ecosystem types
need management intervention, our results provide a strong
framework for doing so."
"My hope is that these
results serve as a wake-up call to better manage and protect our
oceans, rather than a reason to give up," added Halpern.
"Humans will always use
the oceans for recreation, extraction of resources, and for
commercial activity such as shipping. Our goal, and really our
necessity, is to do this in a sustainable way so that our oceans
remain in a healthy state and continue to provide us the
resources we need and want."
Source:
NSF

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