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Rising Carbon Emissions Could Kill Off Vital Corals By 2100, Study Warns

Rising Carbon Emissions Could Kill Off Vital Corals By 2100, Study Warns

by The Daily Eye Team February 4 2017, 5:57 pm Estimated Reading Time: 0 mins, 42 secs

The destruction of coral reefs worldwide could accelerate as rising carbon emissions help coral-killing seaweeds grow more poisonous and take over, according to researchers. A Griffith University study on the Great Barrier Reef has shown how rising CO2emissions trigger more potency in chemicals from common “weed-like” algae that poison corals as they compete for space. The study, conducted on Heron Island with reef and chemical ecology experts from the University of Queensland and the US, predicts that “business as usual” emissions would significantly harm vital corals by 2050 and kill them off by 2100.
The researchers said their findings, which shed new light on the competitive advantage seaweeds enjoyed over corals in seawater with rising carbon concentrations, had global implications as one of the most damaging seaweeds was found in reefs worldwide.

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