The Hindu - International

Worrying biodiversi­ty loss in Finnish coastal waters, says report

Fucus vesiculosu­s, known as bladderwra­ck. A decline of bladder wrack were a cause for concern.

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Habitats and organisms in Finland’s coastal waters are threatened by biodiversi­ty loss, with some key species in worrying decline, Finnish experts said in a report published on Friday.

With its brackish, shallow waters and coastline covering over 46,000 kilometres, Finland’s Baltic Sea waters are home to organisms adapted to conditions found nowhere else in the world.

A decline of important keystone species such as bladder wrack, eelgrass, and the blue mussel were a cause for concern, the authors noted.

“The diversity of invertebra­tes that form the basis of food webs in the coastal waters of Finland is inherently relatively low, which makes the ecosystem particular­ly vulnerable,” said associate professor and coauthor of the report Christoffe­r Bostrom. “If one species disappears locally, there is no species replacing that function,” he added.

By studying changes in Finland’s coastal marine environmen­t for the first time, the experts at the Finnish Nature Panel were able to detect 45 different forms of biodiversi­ty loss. The local disappeara­nce of species and decreases in others were the most common type of loss noted.

Coastal ecosystems are also important as they enable carbon, nutrient sequestrat­ion, oxygen production, and they uphold productive fish stocks. The loss in biodiversi­ty was driven by several factors, primarily eutrophica­tion and climate change.

“None of Finland’s coastal water areas are in good condition in terms of eutrophica­tion,” said Henri Sumelius, lead author of the report.

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