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The world's most important coral region is in danger of being wiped out by the end of this century unless fast action is taken, says a new report. 一项新报告称,世界上最重要的珊瑚地区如果在本世纪末不采取行动,将面临被全面破坏的危险。 Coral reefs, like this one off Indonesia's Komodo island, support entire eco-systems The international conservation group WWF warns that 40% of reefs(暗礁) in the Coral Triangle have already been lost. The area is shared between Indonesia and five other south-east Asian nations and is thought to contain 75% of the world's coral species. It is likened to the Amazon rainforest in terms of its biodiversity. Temperature change It's 2099, and across south-east Asia, a hundred million people are on the march, looking for food. The fish they once relied on is gone. Communities are breaking down; economies destroyed. That is what we can expect, says the new WWF report, if the world's richest coral reef is destroyed. And that, it says, could happen this century. It's billed as a worst-case scenario1, but the report's chief author, Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, says it is not as bad as the future we're currently headed towards. "Up until now we haven't realized how quickly this system is changing," says Professtor Hoegh-Guldberg. "In the last 40 years in the Coral Triangle, we've lost 40% of coral reefs and mangroves(红树林) - and that's probably an underestimate. We've fundamentally changed the way the planet works in terms of currents and this is only with a 0.7 degree change in terms of temperature. "What's going to happen when we exceed two or four or six?" The region contains three-quarters of all coral species Climate change consequences Avoiding a worst-case scenario would need significant reductions in greenhouse gas emissions2 and better controls on fishing and coastal3 areas, says the report. The Coral Triangle covers 1% of the earth's surface but contains a third of all the world's coral, and three-quarters of its coral reef species. If it goes, an entire eco-system goes with it - and that, says Prof Hoegh-Gudberg, has serious consequences for its ability to tackle climate change. "Pollution, the inappropriate use of coastal areas, these are destroying the productivity of ocean which is plummeting4(垂直落下) right now. That is the system that traps CO2 - 40% of CO2 goes into the ocean. "Now if we interrupt that, the problems on planet earth become even greater," says Prof Hoegh-Gudberg. Indonesia is hosting the World Ocean Conference this week because, it says, oceans have been neglected so far in global discussions on climate change. It wants the issue to have a bigger profile at UN climate talks later this year. 点击收听单词发音
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