2024-10-28 16:43:00
phys.org
Written by a team of European experts from the marine sciences, “Navigating the Future VI” discusses how the biodiversity crisis is being played out in the Ocean. The Position Paper notes that ocean species large and small are far less well described than their terrestrial counterparts, making it harder to measure declines and their impacts.
This publication provides governments, policymakers and funders with robust, independent scientific advice on future seas and ocean research. With the COP16 on biodiversity already in full swing in Cali, Colombia, it is timely to reflect further on the need to better understand our ocean biodiversity.
“Climate change is causing the ocean to warm up. This forces species to move to find conditions to which they are adapted. But we do not fully understand the implications of these movements.
“When species move to new habitats, they might spread microorganisms that could cause an epidemic among the native species, or conversely, the new arrivals could be susceptible to suffering an epidemic themselves.
“To avoid such epidemic events, which could lead to local extinctions, we need to understand far more about pathogenic microorganisms and where they live”, says Carlos Pereira Dopazo, lead author of the chapter on Ocean and Biodiversity.
Critical research questions
The NFVI Ocean and Biodiversity chapter presents the ongoing research questions surrounding ocean biodiversity and its evolution as the Earth changes. It recommends that we focus on addressing the questions of:
- What combinations of traditional taxonomic and new genomic methods can we use to speed up species’ identification and make monitoring of biodiversity more comprehensive?
- Where do pathogenic marine microorganisms occur, and could they pose a future epidemic risk for marine species?
- Where will marine species, such as commercially important fish, move to as the climate changes and the Ocean warms, and how can we avoid human conflicts when species move to new areas?
- What emerging human activities will affect marine biodiversity in the future, and how can we mitigate these risks?
- How will invasive species affect native marine ecosystems?
- Ocean species’ and ecosystem conservation and restoration are costly, but what is the ultimate economic and societal cost of inaction?
More information:
Report: Navigating the Future VI
Provided by
Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research
Citation:
Report focuses on the critical role the ocean plays in Earth’s interconnected systems (2024, October 28)
retrieved 29 October 2024
from https://phys.org/news/2024-10-focuses-critical-role-ocean-plays.html
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