Status of coral reefs and associated ecosystems in Southern Tropical America: Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Panamá and Venezuela

Fecha

2008

Autores

Rodríguez Ramírez, Alberto
Bastidas, Carolina
Cortés Núñez, Jorge
Guzmán, Héctor M.
Leão, Zelinda
Garzón Ferreira, Jaime
Kikuchi, Ruy
Padovani Ferreira, Beatrice
Alvarado Barrientos, Juan José
Jiménez Centeno, Carlos

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Algae are the most abundant reef organisms in most of the countries; high coral cover does occur at numerous reef locations at the Caribbean (~70%) and Pacific (~95%) coasts. No major changes in live coral cover have been observed recently in the region; some localised decline and recovery trends are evident for each country. Coral reefs in the region experience many natural and human threats, and predictions suggest that nearly 50% of reefs are at very low risk of decline in 5-10 years, even considering global climate change, and around 40% of reefs could be under high risk of decline in the mid-long term (>10 years). Massive coral bleaching occurred in southern tropical America during 2005, but the severity varied across the region. Reef monitoring has increased, but low funding for monitoring programs occurs all countries; socio-economic monitoring is restricted to Brazil. Information on reef fisheries from monitoring programs is scarce, however, the consensus is for depletion of coral reefs resources, particularly in the Caribbean; and seagrass and mangrove communities are mainly threatened by coastal development, sedimentation, pollution, and deforestation.

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CORAL REEFS, ECOSYSTEMS, BRAZIL, COLOMBIA, COSTA RICA, PANAMA, VENEZUELA

Citación

https://icriforum.org/documents/status-of-coral-reefs-of-the-world-2008/

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