18/11/2005-
Geneva, Switzerland – Fish are increasingly threatened
by the effects of climate change as temperatures rise
in rivers, lakes and oceans, says a new WWF report. It
says that hotter water means less food, less offspring
and even less oxygen for marine and freshwater fish populations.
A week ahead of a key Meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto
Protocol in Montreal, Canada, the global conservation
organization’s report — Are we putting our fish in hot
water? — shows that global warming is causing the world's
waters to warm while rainfall patterns, currents and sea
levels are changing.
“The balance is set to tip, as climate change continues
the pressure on fish populations already strained by overfishing,
pollution and habitat loss,” said Katherine Short, a fisheries
officer with WWF’s Global Marine Programme. “We must act
to protect fish, both marine and freshwater, they are
one of our most valuable biological, nutritional, and
economic assets.”
The report shows that hotter temperatures are expected
to stunt the growth of some fish, resulting in fewer offspring.
Normally fish metabolisms speed up as temperatures rise,
but insufficient food supplies could slow their growth
and reproduction rates. Some temperate fish like salmon,
catfish and sturgeon cannot spawn at all if winter temperatures
do not drop below a certain level.
To make matters worse, the WWF report shows that freshwater
fish particularly may not have enough oxygen to breathe
as waters grow warmer. Fish filter oxygen from water,
but the amount of oxygen dissolved in water decreases
as temperatures rise.
Meanwhile, hotter temperatures mean that fish populations
could move to cooler waters in an effort to maintain the
temperature normal for their habitat. However, this can
leave other species in dire straits that are dependent
on these fish as a food source. In the Gulf of Alaska
in 1993, as fish moved into cooler waters around 120,000
sea birds starved to death as they were unable to dive
deep enough to reach their relocated prey.
Worldwide, marine and freshwater fisheries generate over
US$130 billion annually, employ at least 200 million people,
and feed billions of people reliant on fish as an important
source of protein.
WWF wants governments meeting in Montreal to commit to
starting negotiations for deeper cuts in CO2 emissions
once the current commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol
runs out in 2012.
“If we fail to secure deeper reductions in greenhouse
gas emissions, we will increase the pressures on fish
and billions of people that depend on them as an important
source of protein,” said Stephan Singer, Head of WWF’s
European Climate and Energy Policy Unit.
“Unless governments slow the rate and extent of climate
change we’re all going to feel like fish out of water.”
END NOTE:
• The European Union, other governments and many civil
society groups have committed themselves to keeping the
rise of global average temperature below 2°C above
pre-industrial levels. |