Stabroek News Sunday

Climate risk index shows threats to 90 per cent of the world’s marine species

- By Daniel G. Boyce This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on (https://theconvers­ation.com/) under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article here: https://bit.ly/3T496LE

(The Conversati­on) - Climate change impacts marine life through a bewilderin­g web of complex pathways. Warming oceans and climate extremes are driving species into deeper, more northern and cooler locations, altering their behaviour and reconfigur­ing marine ecosystems in radical and unpreceden­ted ways.

While some impacts can be beneficial, many are harmful, making it difficult to understand the overall effects of climate on individual species and ecosystems. Despite these challenges, we urgently need to understand how changing climate conditions affect marine life to plan and develop adaptation approaches to steward it effectivel­y under climate change.

In our new study, my coauthors and I developed the Climate Risk Index for Biodiversi­ty, which captures the climate risk for nearly 25,000 marine species and their ecosystems. This new index lays the groundwork for supporting climate-smart approaches to managing and conserving marine life.

A climate report card

We used a data-driven statistica­l approach to create a “climate report card” for each species and ecosystem that tells us which ones will win or lose under climate change. This approach enabled us to study a broad spectrum of life forms, from microscopi­c plankton to large predators and whales, across all marine ecosystems from the tropics to the poles. Just as a report card grades students on subjects such as math and science, we assessed each species on 12 specific climate risk factors depending on two different future scenarios — one with lower emissions and one with higher emissions.

The climate risk factors express how the innate characteri­stics of a species — their body size and temperatur­e tolerance — intersect with past, present and future ocean conditions at all locations where they are found.

The resulting risk scale ranges from negligible (lowest) to critical (highest) and represents both the severity of harmful climate impacts on species and their likelihood of occurring.

Divergent climate futures

Our study focuses on two possible shared socioecono­mic pathway scenarios of how future society — and the greenhouse gas emissions it produces — could transpire. The results paint two wildly divergent pictures for marine life and people.

In the high emissions scenario, the global average ocean temperatur­e will increase by three to five degrees Celcius by 2100. Under this scenario, almost 90 per cent of the 25,000 species we assessed were at a “high” or “critical” climate risk. The average species was at risk across 85 per cent of its geographic range.

The risk is highest in the subtropica­l and tropical ecosystems that tend to be biodiversi­ty hotspots and in nearshore ecosystems that support 96 per cent of the global fish catch. Top predators like sharks and tunas were at significan­tly higher risk than species further down the food chain, like forage fishes. Such predators can have massive effects on ecosystem structure and functionin­g.

Our findings also suggest severe ripple effects for people who most rely on the ocean. Under high emissions, climate risks for fished species such as cod and lobsters were consistent­ly greater within the territorie­s of low-income nations, where people depend more on fisheries to meet their nutritiona­l needs.

This represents yet another example of climate inequality wherein low-income countries that have contribute­d the least to climate change, and are more aggressive­ly reducing their emissions, are experienci­ng its worst impacts while having the lowest capacity to adapt to them.

Our study stresses that we are at a critical fork in the road and that choosing a more sustainabl­e path that prioritize­s climate mitigation will lead to clear benefits for ocean life and people. Under a low emissions scenario, average ocean temperatur­es are expected to increase by one to two degrees Celsius by 2100, as per the two degrees Celsius global

warming limit in the Paris Agreement.

Under this future, we found a reduced climate risk for virtually all marine life (98.2 per cent). The disproport­ionate risk for ecosystem structure, biodiversi­ty, fisheries and low-income nations are greatly reduced or eliminated.

Averting harmful climate risks

Our approaches to fisheries management, protected area planning and biodiversi­ty conservati­on originated in a world with a relatively stable climate. But climate change is rewriting the rule books and threatenin­g to undermine the effectiven­ess of these traditiona­l approaches.

Cutting emissions is the most direct approach to reducing climate risks. Yet, even with strong mitigation, our study suggests that climate change will continue to affect marine life.

In addition to reducing emissions, it is imperative that we simultaneo­usly find ways to adapt to a warming climate to protect our oceans. We must incorporat­e new methods and adaptation strategies, develop capacity in under-resourced parts

of the world and carefully weigh the pros and cons of adaptation measures.

Our study provides a new tool and index to help inform decision-makers when navigating these complex issues. It can assist with developing strategies to manage and conserve marine life under climate change, monitor changing climate risk and gauge progress towards risk reduction.

While our study paints a potentiall­y grim future under high emissions, it also highlights how our oceans and marine life could benefit from climate change mitigation and adaptation and stresses the urgency with which we must work towards this goal.

Daniel G. Boyce is a Research Scientist at Bedford Institute of Oceanograp­hy, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, and Adjunct Professor at Dalhousie University.

 ?? (Daniel G. Boyce photo) ?? The biodiversi­ty-rich Komodo Island in Indonesia is a climate risk hotspot.
(Daniel G. Boyce photo) The biodiversi­ty-rich Komodo Island in Indonesia is a climate risk hotspot.

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