January 29, 2015
University of Sheffield
Summary:
Overfishing, pollution, climate change and destruction of habitats like
coral reefs are all putting our seas in trouble but academics fear the risk is
not being taken as seriously as concerns for the loss of animals and plants
which live on land, experts say. Using the most comprehensive conservation data
available for both marine and non-marine organisms, new research has shown that
20 to 25 per cent of the well-known species living in our seas are now
threatened with extinction -- the same figure as land living plants and
animals.
Overfishing, pollution,
climate change and destruction of habitats like coral reefs are all putting our
seas in trouble but academics fear the risk is not being taken as seriously as
concerns for the loss of animals and plants which live on land.
Using the most comprehensive conservation data
available for both marine and non-marine organisms, research led by Dr Thomas
Webb, from the University's Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, has shown
that 20 to 25 per cent of the well-known species living in our seas are now
threatened with extinction -- the same figure as land living plants and
animals.
Whale tail. 20 to 25 per cent of the well-known species living in our seas
are now threatened with extinction -- the same figure as land living plants and
animals.
Credit: ©
chetvergov / Fotolia
Dr Webb said: "Until now, there has been a
general assumption that, despite pressures on marine environments like
pollution and overfishing, marine species are unlikely to be threatened with
extinction.
"We have shown that, on the face of it, there are
indeed far fewer marine species of conservation concern; but much of this can
be explained by the fact the conservation status of fewer marine species has
been formally assessed."
This assessment means that species have been checked
against a list of criteria published by the International Union for the
Conservation of Nature, a time-consuming process that has been completed for
only three per cent of marine species, with no assessments at all in three
quarters of the major groups of marine animals and plants.
Dr Webb added: "When we concentrate on those
groups of animals and plants which are best known, and where estimates of
extinction risk are likely to be most reliable, the difference between marine
and non-marine species disappears. Instead, in these groups around one in every
four or five species is estimated to be at a heightened risk of extinction,
whether they live on land or in the sea.
"We ought to be more concerned about marine
species."
The research, which was funded by the Royal Society,
forms part of a broader programme of study challenging the traditional division
between marine ecology and 'mainstream' ecology, the notion that marine systems
are somehow fundamentally different from terrestrial systems, and that this
demands separate research approaches and indeed research institutes -- to study
them.
Dr Webb added: "This is not to say that there are
no important differences, but rather that assumptions need to be tested in
order to make sensible decisions about managing the marine environment."
Story Source:
- Thomas J. Webb, Beth L. Mindel. Global Patterns of Extinction Risk in Marine and Non-marine Systems. Current Biology, 2015; DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2014.12.023
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