Continued unsustainable harvesting of large predatory fish, including
the culling of sharks, can have far-reaching consequences for the way
we tackle climate change.
Professor Rod Connolly, a marine
scientist from Griffith University's Australian Rivers Institute, is the
co-author of new research that says keeping populations of larger fish
intact is critical to carbon accumulation and long-term storage in
vegetated coastal habitats such as saltmarsh, mangroves and seagrass.
A paper, "Predators help protect carbon stocks in blue carbon ecosystems", is published in the journal
Nature Climate Change and
identifies the urgent need for further research on the influence of
predators on carbon cycling, and improved policy and management with
regard to blue carbon reserves.
The research comes as Australia in
particular, in response to a recent spate of shark attacks -- some
fatal -- engages in fierce public debate over shark culling.
Professor
Connolly warns the loss of top order predators through excessive
culling or over-fishing has serious environmental ramifications.
"Altering
the numbers of top ocean predators has major consequences for the way
we tackle climate change," says Professor Connolly.
"These
predators have a cascading effect on the food web and the ecosystem
generally that ultimately changes the amount of carbon captured and
locked up in the seabed."
Coastal wetlands play a crucial role in
this process, extracting carbon from the atmosphere and burying it in
the mud for hundreds and even thousands of years.
"When we change
the abundance of higher order predators, this affects the number of
smaller animals living in the mud, and that has flow-on effects for
carbon storage in coastal wetlands," says Professor Connolly.
"We
are already aware of the need to manage how many fish we take and from
where. But we should also know that our decisions affect climate change.
Professor
Connolly says the coastal wetlands that fringe the world's continents
are doing a power of environmental good, taking a quarter of a trillion
kilograms of carbon out of the atmosphere every year.
However, that efficiency can be easily compromised.
"Predators
play an important and potentially irreplaceable role in carbon cycling.
The effect of the disproportionate loss of species high in the food
chain cannot be underestimated."
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