Human activity is pushing marine life to the brink of collapse, warned a leading international conservation group, which found that overfishing, destruction of marine habitats, and climate change has led to the loss of almost half the world’s marine mammals, birds, reptiles, and fish within a single generation.
The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) on Wednesday released an emergency edition of its Living Blue Planet Report (pdf) to highlight this dangerous trend ahead of the United Nations Sustainable Development Summit later this month.
At the meeting, world leaders are expected to formally approve the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals and WWF is warning that without “profound changes” to the way the ocean is managed and protected the world may be facing an ecosystem “collapse.”
Among the report’s dire findings:
- Around one in four species of sharks, rays, and skates is now threatened with extinction, due primarily to overfishing.
- Tropical reefs have lost more than half their reef-building coral over the last 30 years.
- Marine vertebrate populations declined 49 percent between 1970 and 2012.
- If current rates of temperature rise continue, the ocean will become too warm for coral reefs by 2050.
Further, the study also highlights “an impending social and economic crisis” as fish and other marine life are critical for the food security of billions of people, a large sector of which live in developing countries.
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