

An international team of experts, including from the 黑料正能量, have found marine species is facing a 鈥減erfect storm鈥 due to human activity
15 December 2022
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Experts have warned the pillar coral, found throughout the Caribbean, is at a higher risk of extinction as a result of unsustainable human activity.
It has moved from Vulnerable to Critically Endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature鈥檚 (IUCN) , after its population shrunk by over 80 percent across most of its range since 1990.
An international team of researchers, including from the 黑料正能量, were tasked with evaluating the global extinction risk of reef-building corals in 2018.
With the rapid degradation that reefs have suffered worldwide due to massive bleaching events, it was imperative to update our knowledge about how the populations of individual reef-building coral species have changed
Dr Francoise Cabada-Blanco, School of Biological Sciences at the 黑料正能量
Dr Francoise Cabada-Blanco, from the School of Biological Sciences at the 黑料正能量, said: 鈥淭he extinction risk of reef building corals in the Caribbean had not been updated since 2008. With the rapid degradation that reefs have suffered worldwide due to massive bleaching events, it was imperative to update our knowledge about how the populations of individual reef-building coral species have changed.
鈥淭he pillar coral is a good example of how species-focused research on rare species is crucial to assess their extinction risk and highlight the urgency with which conservation action is needed.鈥
The found bleaching caused by sea surface temperature rise 鈥 as well as antibiotics, overfishing, fertilisers and sewage running into the oceans 鈥 have ravaged their numbers over the past four years.
The most urgent threat is the Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease, which emerged in 2014 and is highly contagious, infecting between 90 and 100 metres of reef per day.
鈥淭he pillar coral is just one of the 26 corals now listed as Critically Endangered in the Atlantic Ocean, where almost half of all corals are now at elevated risk of extinction due to climate change and other impacts,鈥 explained Dr Beth Polidoro, Associate Professor at Arizona State University.
鈥淭hese alarming results emphasise the urgency of global cooperation and action to address climate change impacts on ocean ecosystems.鈥
The IUCN鈥檚 Red List is the world鈥檚 most comprehensive information source on the global extinction risk of animals, fungi and plants. Developed over 50 years ago, it influences policy development and priority setting at a global, regional, and national level.
, of which 42,108 are threatened with extinction. Over 1,550 of the 17,903 marine animals and plants assessed are at risk of extinction, with climate change impacting at least 41 percent of threatened marine species. Populations of dugongs and abalone shellfish are also under threat and could disappear forever.
Reacting to the latest updates, : 鈥淭he IUCN Red List update reveals a perfect storm of unsustainable human activity decimating marine life around the globe. As the world looks to the ongoing UN biodiversity conference to set the course for nature recovery, we simply cannot afford to fail.
鈥淲e urgently need to address the linked climate and biodiversity crises, with profound changes to our economic systems, or we risk losing the crucial benefits the oceans provide us with."