Climate change harms ocean hot spots:study

The areas with the most diverse mix of marine wildlife are also among the hardest hit by climate change, a study has found.

Six ocean hot spots that teem with the biggest mix of species are also getting hit hardest by global warming and industrial fishing, a study has found.

An international study published in the journal Science Advances looked at 2100 species of fish, seabirds, marine mammals and even plankton to calculate Earth's hot spots of marine biodiversity.

It also found overfishing and warming temperatures were hurting the lush life in these areas.

"In those hot spots, the changes are already happening," says study co-author Andre Chiaradia, a senior scientist and penguin expert at the Phillip Island Nature Parks in Australia.

"They are the most at risk," he said.

Researchers found the liveliest ocean hot spot also happens to be where the science of evolution sprouted: the Pacific Ocean off the central South American coast.

Other hot spots include the the southwestern Pacific off Australia's southern and eastern coast, southwestern Atlantic Ocean off Argentina; the western Indian Ocean off the African coast; the central western Pacific Ocean surrounding Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines and the Oceania region of the Pacific around the international date line.

Four of the six hot spots are in the Pacific; all are either in the southern hemisphere or just north of the equator.

"What makes this biodiversity? It's the isolation," Chiardia said.

"On land, we have kangaroos and weird animals like the platypus. And in the ocean it's not different."

Penguins, which are near the top of the food chain, were a good example of the impact of changing water temperatures and currents, Chiardia said.

Warm El Nino waters have decimated Galapagos penguins and the population of southern African penguins had dropped by about 90 per cent in just 20 years.


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Source: AAP


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