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Only 2 pct of coral reefs properly
protected: study
By Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent
Thu Jun 22, 2:03 PM ET
OSLO (Reuters) - Less than 2 percent of the world's tropical coral reefs
are properly protected from illegal fishing, mining or pollution despite
government promises of wider safeguards, an international study showed
on Thursday.
"The figures are depressing," said Camilo Mora, a scientist at Dalhousie
University in Canada and lead author of the study, carried out in New
Zealand by researchers from seven nations.
"Many countries create marine protected areas and then forget about
them," he told Reuters of the findings, published in the journal
Science.
Lack of protection may mean a further shrinking of reefs worldwide, from
the Caribbean to the Indian Ocean. Reefs are key spawning grounds, are
home to species from clown fish to sharks, protect coasts from erosion
and also draw scuba-diving tourists.
"Less than 2 percent are extended protection complete with regulations
on extraction, poaching and other major threats," the report said.
Overall, 18.7 percent of the area covered by tropical reefs was within
marine protected areas -- but most of the conservation was only on
paper. "Lines on the map are not enough to protect the world's coral
reefs," Mora said.
Many governments have promised wider conservation of nature from reefs
to rainforests, partly to help meet a U.N. goal of slowing an
accelerating rate of species loss by 2012.
"While management (of marine protected areas) varies worldwide, it was
particularly low in areas of high coral density such as the Indo-Pacific
and the Caribbean," said Ransom Myers, a researcher at Dalhousie
University.
The study did not name the nations performing worst or best in reef
protection. Mora said, however, that Australia had successfully
increased protection for much of the Great Barrier Reef.
The scientists reached their figures by building a database of protected
areas from 102 countries then comparing it with the extent of reefs,
partly mapped by satellites. They then surveyed more than 1,000 managers
of protected areas and scientists to gauge the conservation performance.
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