Global Warming Is Threat to Great Barrier Reef,
Amazon Rain Forests, Mexican Deserts
Fox News
Friday, April 06, 2007
BRUSSELS, Belgium - An environmental group said Thursday some of the
world's greatest natural treasures are threatened with destruction
because of global warming - from the Great Barrier Reef to the Amazon
rain forests and the unique ecosystem of the Mexican desert.
On the sidelines of a climate change conference in Brussels, the World
Wide Fund for Nature issued a list of 10 regions suffering serious
damage from global warming, and where it has projects to limit further
damage or help people adapt to new conditions.
"What we are talking about are the faces of the impacts of climate
change," said Lara Hansen, WWF's chief scientist on climate issues.
The group said coral reefs around the world, including the Great Barrier
Reef in Australia and the MesoAmerican Reef off Belize, begin to lose
their color and die with a rise in ocean waters of just 1.8 degrees
Fahrenheit. They are also threatened by the increasing ferocity of
tropical storms, another effect of global warming.
Environmentalists project the temperature of the Amazon River could rise
by 3.6 to 5.4 degrees Fahrenheit within 50 years, turning between up to
60 percent of the rain forest into a dry savanna.
In the Bering Sea, warmer winters are leading to the earlier breakup of
spring ice and driving salmon stocks closer to the North Pole,
disrupting the Arctic ecosystem. Melting ice is also diluting sea water
and affecting nutrients for small organisms on which fish feed.
In the Valdivian rain forest in Chile and Argentina, the Alerce tree -
which can live for 3,000 years - is threatened by forest fires and
declining rainfall. Melting glaciers mean groundwater in the region will
also become more scarce.
The Chihuahua Desert straddling the U.S.-Mexican border is suffering
from drought and intensive farming and overgrazing. North America's
largest desert, the Chihuahua has 3,500 unique plant species, including
an array of cactus and yucca, that could be at risk.
Many of the regions at risk were singled out in a report by the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, an authoritative body of
2,500 scientists. The report, which is undergoing governmental review at
the five-day conference in Brussels, projects specific consequences for
each degree of rising global temperatures, which the IPCC agrees is
largely caused by human activity.
Some damage at the 10 areas listed by WWF is irreversible, such as
shrinking glaciers, Hansen said. Certain types of coral reefs, however,
can recover.
The WWF listing also said:
- Six of seven species of Caribbean turtles are endangered as rising sea
levels swamp nesting beaches and feeding grounds.
- Some Himalayan glaciers are receding by 33 to 49 feet per year,
causing floods now and threatening summer drought in the future.
- Glaciers in the Tibetan plateau that feed China's Yangtze river are
also shrinking, adding to water flows now but threatening shortages of
water, food and electricity to 450 million people as they reach a
critical point.
- The Bay of Bengal is rising and increasingly violent rainstorms in
India could inundate coastal islands, destroy mangrove forests and
affect India's Sunderbans, home to the largest wild population of Bengal
tigers and to 1 million people.
- Scientists predict East African coastal forests and the offshore
ecosystem will also be vulnerable to more frequent and intense storms
that will damage agriculture, shoreline mangroves and coral reefs.
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