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One-third of reef-building corals face elevated extinction risk from climate change and local impacts

Authors :
Beth Polidoro
Greta S. Aeby
Alex Rogers
Jennifer Moore
Charles Sheppard
Graham J. Edgar
Kent E. Carpenter
Clarissa Reboton
J. E. N. Veron
Jorge Cortés
Hector M. Guzman
Stuart Banks
Elizabeth Wood
Douglas Fenner
Jonnell C. Sanciangco
J. Charles Delbeek
William F. Precht
Anne Sheppard
Angel Chiriboga
Suzanne R. Livingstone
Gregor Hodgson
Zoe T. Richards
Andrew W. Bruckner
Muhammad Abrar
Jennifer E. Smith
Ernesto Weil
Edward R. Lovell
Bert W. Hoeksema
Richard B. Aronson
Ofri Johan
Carden C. Wallace
Emre Turak
Domingo Ochavillo
Simon N. Stuart
Wilfredo Y. Licuanan
Alasdair J. Edwards
Miledel Christine C. Quibilan
Lyndon DeVantier
David Obura
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

The conservation status of 845 zooxanthellate reef-building coral species was assessed by using International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List Criteria. Of the 704 species that could be assigned conservation status, 32.8% are in categories with elevated risk of extinction. Declines in abundance are associated with bleaching and diseases driven by elevated sea surface temperatures, with extinction risk further exacerbated by local-scale anthropogenic disturbances. The proportion of corals threatened with extinction has increased dramatically in recent decades and exceeds that of most terrestrial groups. The Caribbean has the largest proportion of corals in high extinction risk categories, whereas the Coral Triangle (western Pacific) has the highest proportion of species in all categories of elevated extinction risk. Our results emphasize the widespread plight of coral reefs and the urgent need to enact conservation measures.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....691c2e4aee3b8fada32bcf693bde5686