Abstract

Degradation of coral reef ecosystems began centuries ago, but there is no global summary of the magnitude of change. We compiled records, extending back thousands of years, of the status and trends of seven major guilds of carnivores, herbivores, and architectural species from 14 regions. Large animals declined before small animals and architectural species, and Atlantic reefs declined before reefs in the Red Sea and Australia, but the trajectories of decline were markedly similar worldwide. All reefs were substantially degraded long before outbreaks of coral disease and bleaching. Regardless of these new threats, reefs will not survive without immediate protection from human exploitation over large spatial scales.

Keywords

ReefCoral reefResilience of coral reefsEnvironmental issues with coral reefsEcosystemGeographyCoral bleachingEcologyCoralCoral reef organizationsFisheryCoral reef protectionBiology

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Publication Info

Year
2003
Type
article
Volume
301
Issue
5635
Pages
955-958
Citations
1978
Access
Closed

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1978
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John M. Pandolfi, Roger Bradbury, Enric Sala et al. (2003). Global Trajectories of the Long-Term Decline of Coral Reef Ecosystems. Science , 301 (5635) , 955-958. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1085706

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DOI
10.1126/science.1085706