Biodiversity Guide

Biodiversity In Land Section


 

Biodiversity In Land Navigation

Main Home Page
Tell A Friend about us

List of Biodiversity Articles

Biodiversity In Land Best seller

Buy it Now!



Best Biodiversity In Land products

Sitemap

"Every dog must have his day."

by Jonathan Swift

"Don't be a marshmallow. Walk the street with us into history. Get off the sidewalk. Stop being vegetables. Work for Justice. Viva the boycott!"

by Dolores Huerta

"I have always thought it would be a blessing if each person could be blind and deaf for a few days during his early adult life. Darkness would make him appreciate sight; silence would teach him the joys of sound."

by Helen Keller

"When I see the Ten Most Wanted Lists... I always have this thought: If we'd made them feel wanted earlier, they wouldn't be wanted now."

by Eddie Cantor

"Caesar said to the soothsayer, 'The ides of March are come'; who answered him calmly, 'Yes, they are come, but they are not past.'"

by Plutarch

"Be like the bird that, pausing in her flight awhile on boughs too slight, feels them give way beneath her, and yet sings, knowing that she hath wings."

by Victor Hugo



Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Biodiversity
Email:
First Name:



Main Biodiversity In Land sponsors


 

 

Welcome to Biodiversity Guide

 

Biodiversity In Land Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

Why Marine Biodiversity May Be The Most Important Issue On Earth

from:


Marine biodiversity is the variability of life in marine ecosystems. Marine ecosystems include oceans, salt marshes, estuaries, lagoons, coral reefs, shores, and some of the tropical ecosystems (like mangrove forests). They are part of a larger, world ecosystem, and are characterized by having a much greater salinity level than fresh waters.

Even though marine ecosystems are teeming with life, the species diversity is much lower than that of other ecosystems. Only about 230,000 species have been identified, and that number includes both plants and animals.

Much of marine biodiversity resides in ecosystems based around coral reefs and/or areas of underwater tectonic activity. They hold over a quarter of the world's marine species. One third of the coral species are currently threatened with extinction. This is a rise over the last decade from less than two percent. Unfortunately, coral reefs all over are dying due to many forms of damage, all originating from one source: human beings. Snorkeling, commercial fishing and overfishing, fuel leaks from both commercial and recreational boats all contribute to the damage or outright destruction of both the coral reefs and marine biodiversity in general. Climate change can also affect coral reefs, the rising temperatures making them reject the algal growths that help the process of photosynthesis. 1998, one of the warmest years, saw mass die-offs of coral reefs all over the world.

Given that life originated in the sea, it is not surprising that there are fourteen endemic animal phyla in the sea, as opposed to the one phylum endemic to land. The situation is much different for plants, however. Almost all algae type plants can appear in both marine and fresh water, with the higher classes of plants only growing on land. The diversity of life-history strategies in marine organisms has proven to be remarkable to the point where scientists are expecting that the total of genetic resources and physiological marine biodiversity will be much greater than that of land organisms.

Without marine biodiversity, humankind would suffer greatly since marine organisms are crucial to almost all biogeochemical processes of the biosphere. They also help provide a variety of products and services essential to man’s survival and well-being. Without marine biodiversity the production of food, ingredients for biotechnology and pharmaceuticals, and even the composition of some parts of land would be either severely diminished or depleted altogether.

For all of the above reasons, as well as for the fascination and great beauty it provides, marine biodiversity is one of our greatest treasures and must be protected and shepherded accordingly.


Other Biodiversity In Land related Articles

What Is Biodiversity
Biodiversity Definition
Threats To Biodiversity
Loss Of Biodiversity
Definition Of Biodiversity

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


 

Biodiversity In Land News

Commission holds on to soil protection law - EurActiv


Commission holds on to soil protection law
EurActiv
... national policies are not delivering and land management increasingly affects cross-border issues like climate change, biodiversity and water pollution. ...

and more »

Read more...


Africa: It's Possible to Reverse Climate Change in Africa - AllAfrica.com


Africa: It's Possible to Reverse Climate Change in Africa
AllAfrica.com
So how do biodiversity conservation and traditional knowledge fit into this equation? There are four ways to deal with climate change. ...

Read more...


Common English species face extinction - The Guardian


Common English species face extinction
The Guardian
But the global collapse of biodiversity hurts almost beyond endurance. The sense that the world is greying, its wealth of colour and surprise and wonder ...

Read more...


Indian farmers battle against nuclear plant - BBC News


BBC News

Indian farmers battle against nuclear plant
BBC News
"First is the impact on the environment and the long term impact because of radioactivity on human beings and biodiversity, including sea life," he says. ...

and more »

Read more...


Murray irrigators allowed 62pc - ABC Online


ABC Online

Murray irrigators allowed 62pc
ABC Online
The Department of Water, Land and Biodiversity Conservation says South Australia has been provided with about 90 gigalitres of improved flows. ...
Push to end states' water squabblesAdelaide Independent Weekly
Xenophon pushes for Commonwealth control of flood waterABC Online

all 5 news articles »

Read more...


Connecting the Farm with the Consumer - Gig Harbor Life


Connecting the Farm with the Consumer
Gig Harbor Life
Although the farm is not certified yet, there are no chemical fertilizers and pesticides used, and she applies her environmental studies and biodiversity ...

and more »

Read more...


Land managers face many challenges - Quad City Times


Land managers face many challenges
Quad City Times
“We have an interest here because of biodiversity, but if we don't protect it from altered hydrology, it won't last.” The Cedar and Iowa rivers flooded in ...
Greiner Family Nature PreserveQuad City Times

all 4 news articles »

Read more...