Assessment: World Heritage coral reefs likely to disappear by 2100
UNESCO’s World Heritage Centre released the first global scientific assessment of climate change impacts on World Heritage coral reefs. Soaring ocean temperatures in the past three years have subjected 21 of 29 World Heritage reefs to severe and/or repeated heat stress, and caused some of the worst bleaching ever observed at iconic sites like the Great Barrier Reef (Australia), Papahānaumokuākea (USA), the Lagoons of New Caledonia (France) and Aldabra Atoll (Seychelles). The analysis predicts that all 29 coral-containing World Heritage sites would cease to exist as functioning coral reef ecosystems by the end of this century under a business-as-usual emissions scenario.
Coral reefs and climate change - resource
Grand Challenges — Coral Reef Deterioration in the Florida Keys, by Megan Tran, Grand Challenges 2020 Team 13
PDF) SHIMMERY WASTE: A QUEER CRITIQUE OF THE NARRATIVES ON GLITTER POLLUTION
EXPERT REACTION: UNESCO report - Impacts of Climate Change on World Heritage Coral Reefs - Scimex
Coral Reefs Could Be Gone in 30 Years
25 Travel Destinations to Visit Before They Disappear - Men's Journal
Coral reefs are more endangered than previously thought
Assessment: World Heritage coral reefs likely to disappear by 2100 unless CO2 emissions drastically reduce - UNESCO World Heritage Centre
Climate change could kill all of Earth's coral reefs by 2100, scientists warn
The World's Coral Reefs Could Disappear in as Little as 30 Years
Falsas catástrofes invisíveis e ameaças de destruição
Plateau Plaform Contact INTERNATIONAL PAPER, plateau carton
Corals The Quagga
Falsas catástrofes invisíveis e ameaças de destruição
The UN is slowly warming to the task of protecting World Heritage sites from climate change