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The coast is not clear

The coast is not clear human activities in coastal areas are endangering marshes, estuaries, coral reefs and mangrove forests, warns a new report. "Unless things change very quickly, the world's coastal areas face a bleak future,' says Jonathan Lash, president of the Washington dc -based World Resources Institute ( wri ), which released the report Pilot Analysis of Global Ecosystems ( page ): Coastal Ecosystems.

Almost 30 per cent of the land area of coastal ecosystems across the world has already been extensively altered or destroyed due to rising demands for housing, industry and recreation facilities, the report states. An estimated four out of every 10 people live within 100 kilometres of a coast. "Coastal populations are exploding and as they increase, pressures on coastal ecosystems will also multiply,' concedes Lash.

wri scientists studied coastal zones around the globe, including the intertidal and subtidal areas on and above the continental shelf to a depth of 200 metres and adjacent lands. They analysed the condition of coastal areas, which they defined as the current and future capacity of the ecosystems that provide a wide range of goods and services needed or valued by humans. Both the quantity and quality of these goods and services in many areas have been severely affected, claim wri researchers.

Many fish populations are also declining. Overall, 75 per cent of fish stocks have either depleted or are being fished at their maximum biological limit. The wri also looked at these ecosystems' contributions to shoreline stabilisation, water quality, biodiversity and the tourism industry. The report states that growing erosion of beaches is affecting the tourism industry, particularly in island nations. In the Caribbean, for example, at least 70 per cent of beaches have eroded. Scientists researching on climate change assert that an increase in ocean temperatures could result in a sea-level rise of as much as 95 centimetres at the end of this century. "The resulting storms could intensify erosion, increase salinity of freshwater aquifers and coastal flooding,' said Yumiko Kura, one of the authors of the report.

Emphasis is being laid on the protection of shorelines, especially in small countries and the ones with limited fertile land. In Japan, the government estimates that about 46 per cent of its shorelines need protection. It has already spent more than us $40 billion on this effort.

The report also warns that the destruction of coral reefs due to harmful fishing practices and mining has become a serious problem. Coral bleaching, which results from rising ocean temperatures caused by climate changes, is also increasing. In the last 50 years, as much as 85 per cent of the mangroves have been lost in Thailand, the Philippines, Pakistan, Panama and Mexico. Globally, about 50 per cent of mangrove forests have been destroyed.

Recent years have also seen an increase in pollution from inland sources and the loss of coastal habitats that filter pollution. This has led to the expansion of oxygen-depleted (dead) zones, such as those in the Gulf of Mexico. These areas are deadly to fish and other marine species. The incidences of harmful algal blooms along the us coastlines have also increased

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