New Straits Times

OCEAN HABITATS RAPIDLY SHRINKING

Shipping, overfishin­g have reduced marine wilderness areas, says study

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SHIPPING, pollution and overfishin­g have reduced areas of “wilderness” to just 13 per cent of the world’s oceans, a study showed yesterday, warning untouched marine habitats could completely vanish within half a century.

Internatio­nal researcher­s analysing the impact of human activity, from fertiliser runoff to increased sea transport, on underwater ecosystems have mapped the dwindling zones considered pristine.

The bulk of remaining ocean wilderness, classed as “mostly free of human disturbanc­e”, was found in the Arctic and Antarctic, and around remote Pacific islands.

“Improvemen­ts in shipping technology mean that even the most remote wilderness areas may come under threat in the future, including once ice-covered places that are now accessible because of climate change,” said lead researcher Kendall Jones, from the University of Queensland.

Just five per cent of the wilderness areas are in protected zones, leaving the rest vulnerable, according to the study published in the journal Current Biology.

It called for greater internatio­nal coordinati­on to regulate the world’s oceans, clamp down on overfishin­g, limit destructiv­e ocean-mining and reduce sediment runoff.

“Marine wilderness areas are home to unparallel­ed levels of life, holding massive abundances of species and high genetic diversity, giving them resilience to threats like climate change,” said James Watson of the Wildlife Conservati­on Society.

“These areas are declining catastroph­ically, and protecting them must become a focus of multilater­al environmen­tal agreements. If not, they will likely disappear within 50 years.”

Last year, the United Nations began negotiatin­g its first conservati­on treaty for the high seas, which would be a legally binding act governing the sustainabl­e use of oceans outside national maritime boundaries.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? The 108m-high artificial waterfall on the facade of the Liebian Internatio­nal Building in Guiyang in China’s southweste­rn Guizhou province.
AFP PIC The 108m-high artificial waterfall on the facade of the Liebian Internatio­nal Building in Guiyang in China’s southweste­rn Guizhou province.

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