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Coral Reefs and People in a High-CO(2) World: Where Can Science Make a Difference to People?

REEFS AND PEOPLE AT RISK: Increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere put shallow, warm-water coral reef ecosystems, and the people who depend upon them at risk from two key global environmental stresses: 1) elevated sea surface temperature (that can cause coral bleaching and related morta...

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Autores principales: Pendleton, Linwood, Comte, Adrien, Langdon, Chris, Ekstrom, Julia A., Cooley, Sarah R., Suatoni, Lisa, Beck, Michael W., Brander, Luke M., Burke, Lauretta, Cinner, Josh E., Doherty, Carolyn, Edwards, Peter E. T., Gledhill, Dwight, Jiang, Li-Qing, van Hooidonk, Ruben J., Teh, Louise, Waldbusser, George G., Ritter, Jessica
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5102364/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27828972
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164699
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author Pendleton, Linwood
Comte, Adrien
Langdon, Chris
Ekstrom, Julia A.
Cooley, Sarah R.
Suatoni, Lisa
Beck, Michael W.
Brander, Luke M.
Burke, Lauretta
Cinner, Josh E.
Doherty, Carolyn
Edwards, Peter E. T.
Gledhill, Dwight
Jiang, Li-Qing
van Hooidonk, Ruben J.
Teh, Louise
Waldbusser, George G.
Ritter, Jessica
author_facet Pendleton, Linwood
Comte, Adrien
Langdon, Chris
Ekstrom, Julia A.
Cooley, Sarah R.
Suatoni, Lisa
Beck, Michael W.
Brander, Luke M.
Burke, Lauretta
Cinner, Josh E.
Doherty, Carolyn
Edwards, Peter E. T.
Gledhill, Dwight
Jiang, Li-Qing
van Hooidonk, Ruben J.
Teh, Louise
Waldbusser, George G.
Ritter, Jessica
author_sort Pendleton, Linwood
collection PubMed
description REEFS AND PEOPLE AT RISK: Increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere put shallow, warm-water coral reef ecosystems, and the people who depend upon them at risk from two key global environmental stresses: 1) elevated sea surface temperature (that can cause coral bleaching and related mortality), and 2) ocean acidification. These global stressors: cannot be avoided by local management, compound local stressors, and hasten the loss of ecosystem services. Impacts to people will be most grave where a) human dependence on coral reef ecosystems is high, b) sea surface temperature reaches critical levels soonest, and c) ocean acidification levels are most severe. Where these elements align, swift action will be needed to protect people’s lives and livelihoods, but such action must be informed by data and science. AN INDICATOR APPROACH: Designing policies to offset potential harm to coral reef ecosystems and people requires a better understanding of where CO(2)-related global environmental stresses could cause the most severe impacts. Mapping indicators has been proposed as a way of combining natural and social science data to identify policy actions even when the needed science is relatively nascent. To identify where people are at risk and where more science is needed, we map indicators of biological, physical and social science factors to understand how human dependence on coral reef ecosystems will be affected by globally-driven threats to corals expected in a high-CO(2) world. Western Mexico, Micronesia, Indonesia and parts of Australia have high human dependence and will likely face severe combined threats. As a region, Southeast Asia is particularly at risk. Many of the countries most dependent upon coral reef ecosystems are places for which we have the least robust data on ocean acidification. These areas require new data and interdisciplinary scientific research to help coral reef-dependent human communities better prepare for a high CO(2) world.
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spelling pubmed-51023642016-11-18 Coral Reefs and People in a High-CO(2) World: Where Can Science Make a Difference to People? Pendleton, Linwood Comte, Adrien Langdon, Chris Ekstrom, Julia A. Cooley, Sarah R. Suatoni, Lisa Beck, Michael W. Brander, Luke M. Burke, Lauretta Cinner, Josh E. Doherty, Carolyn Edwards, Peter E. T. Gledhill, Dwight Jiang, Li-Qing van Hooidonk, Ruben J. Teh, Louise Waldbusser, George G. Ritter, Jessica PLoS One Research Article REEFS AND PEOPLE AT RISK: Increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere put shallow, warm-water coral reef ecosystems, and the people who depend upon them at risk from two key global environmental stresses: 1) elevated sea surface temperature (that can cause coral bleaching and related mortality), and 2) ocean acidification. These global stressors: cannot be avoided by local management, compound local stressors, and hasten the loss of ecosystem services. Impacts to people will be most grave where a) human dependence on coral reef ecosystems is high, b) sea surface temperature reaches critical levels soonest, and c) ocean acidification levels are most severe. Where these elements align, swift action will be needed to protect people’s lives and livelihoods, but such action must be informed by data and science. AN INDICATOR APPROACH: Designing policies to offset potential harm to coral reef ecosystems and people requires a better understanding of where CO(2)-related global environmental stresses could cause the most severe impacts. Mapping indicators has been proposed as a way of combining natural and social science data to identify policy actions even when the needed science is relatively nascent. To identify where people are at risk and where more science is needed, we map indicators of biological, physical and social science factors to understand how human dependence on coral reef ecosystems will be affected by globally-driven threats to corals expected in a high-CO(2) world. Western Mexico, Micronesia, Indonesia and parts of Australia have high human dependence and will likely face severe combined threats. As a region, Southeast Asia is particularly at risk. Many of the countries most dependent upon coral reef ecosystems are places for which we have the least robust data on ocean acidification. These areas require new data and interdisciplinary scientific research to help coral reef-dependent human communities better prepare for a high CO(2) world. Public Library of Science 2016-11-09 /pmc/articles/PMC5102364/ /pubmed/27828972 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164699 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pendleton, Linwood
Comte, Adrien
Langdon, Chris
Ekstrom, Julia A.
Cooley, Sarah R.
Suatoni, Lisa
Beck, Michael W.
Brander, Luke M.
Burke, Lauretta
Cinner, Josh E.
Doherty, Carolyn
Edwards, Peter E. T.
Gledhill, Dwight
Jiang, Li-Qing
van Hooidonk, Ruben J.
Teh, Louise
Waldbusser, George G.
Ritter, Jessica
Coral Reefs and People in a High-CO(2) World: Where Can Science Make a Difference to People?
title Coral Reefs and People in a High-CO(2) World: Where Can Science Make a Difference to People?
title_full Coral Reefs and People in a High-CO(2) World: Where Can Science Make a Difference to People?
title_fullStr Coral Reefs and People in a High-CO(2) World: Where Can Science Make a Difference to People?
title_full_unstemmed Coral Reefs and People in a High-CO(2) World: Where Can Science Make a Difference to People?
title_short Coral Reefs and People in a High-CO(2) World: Where Can Science Make a Difference to People?
title_sort coral reefs and people in a high-co(2) world: where can science make a difference to people?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5102364/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27828972
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164699
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