A new report 
 
representing 
 
a three-year project led 
 
by US-based World 
 
Resources Institute warns 
 
that the world's 
 
coral reefs could be 
 
95% gone by 2050 
 
without urgent action 
 
to halt global warming, 
 
overfishing 
 
and other harms. 
 
The report “Reefs 
 
at Risk Revisited,” 
 
representing 
 
a collaboration of 
 
more than 20 research 
 
and conservation 
 
organizations, examines 
 
in much greater detail the 
 
original “Reefs at Risk” 
 
report written in 1998. 
 
In the 13 years
 
since the first study, 
 
the researchers have 
 
found that the reef area 
 
at risk of destruction 
 
has increased by nearly 
 
one-third, with one of 
 
its biggest threats 
 
to survival being 
 
exploitative fishing. 
 
Especially damaging are 
 
fishing methods such as 
 
dynamite that cause 
 
widespread destruction, 
 
resulting in increasingly 
 
grave imbalances 
 
to coral reefs and their 
 
surrounding ecosystems. 
 
Other threats to the reefs 
 
are warming waters 
 
from climate change, 
 
which cause 
 
coral bleaching; 
 
ocean acidification from 
 
excessive carbon dioxide 
 
absorption, and 
 
contamination due to 
 
agricultural runoff. 
 
With experts such as 
 
Dr. Jane Lubchenco , 
 
head of the US 
 
National Oceanic 
 
Atmospheric Agency, 
 
(NOAA) saying that the 
 
report reminds the public 
 
of the urgent need 
 
for the reefs' 
 
greater protection, lead 
 
author Lauretta Burke, 
 
a senior associate at WRI 
 
stated that a little effort 
 
can go a long way 
 
toward restoring 
 
local areas. 
 
Finally, Dr. Mark Spalding,
 
a senior marine scientist 
 
with The Nature 
 
Conservancy, cautioned 
 
against inaction, saying, 
 
“…If we don't learn 
 
from these successes, 
 
then I think that 
 
in 50 years' time, 
 
most reefs will be gone - 
 
just banks of 
 
eroding limestone, 
 
overgrown with algae 
 
and grazed by a small 
 
variety of small fish.” 
 
Many thanks, 
 
World Resources 
 
Institute and all 
 
researchers involved 
 
in producing this 
 
detailed report showing 
 
how human actions 
 
could drive coral reefs 
 
to extinction. 
 
May we quickly change 
 
our actions to assist 
 
all the fragile yet vital 
 
marine ecosystems 
 
in being fully restored. 
 
During a November 2008 
 
interview with Ireland's 
 
East Coast Radio FM, 
 
Supreme Master Ching Hai 
 
spoke about 
 
the importance of 
 
the imperiled coral reefs 
 
as well as
 
the way we could 
 
effectively save them.
Supreme Master Ching Hai: Now, the coral reefs 
 
are there for some reason. 
 
See, there are many factors 
 
that affect coral reefs, 
 
like coastal development, 
 
water pollution, changing 
 
sea water temperature 
 
because of global warming. 
 
 
Some scientists predict 
 
that most of the coral 
 
reefs could disappear 
 
in the near future 
 
if global warming 
 
increases. 
 
 
Coral reefs are just like 
 
the forest on land. 
 
They are the protectors 
 
of 100-plus countries' 
 
coastlines against storm 
 
surges and hurricanes. 
 
They are the protectors. 
 
And they are also 
 
the supporters 
 
of over 25% of 
 
all marine species. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
We must protect 
 
a living and healthy sea, 
 
as it relates to our 
 
living and healthy self.
The solution is 
 
vegetarian diet. 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-12530439   
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/feb/23/coral-reef-report-dying-danger
  
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/ipad/all-coral-reefs-extinct-by-2050/story-fn6s850w-1226011067921
  
http://www.france24.com/en/20110223-worlds-coral-reefs-risk-becoming-extinct-climate-change-pollution-environment
 
http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-02-coral-network-asia-pac-fish-stocks.html