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Now, a new study published in Global Ecology and Biogeography warns that the world's entire acreage of mangroves has been overestimated, that there is less than originally thought and that we are losing these critically important aquatic forests at an alarming rate.
Scientists from the United States, Australia, and Kenya poured over the most recent satellite data taken by the U.S. Geological Survey for its Global Land Survey, along with other archive images, that utilize remarkable high resolution Landsat satellite photographs. By comparing them to previous estimates by the United Nation's Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), it was found that overall, mangrove forests are 12.9% less than previously thought. And since 1980, 20% to 30% has been lost globally, with mangrove forests disappearing at an average rate of 1% per year.
As reported by BBC Earth News, Dr. Chandra Giri, one of the scientists involved in the study, warned, "13% is significant, especially as it is disappearing faster than inland tropical forests. We need to preserve the remaining mangrove forests with urgency otherwise they might disappear."
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Because of the mangroves' massive root networks, they also serve to protect fragile coastlines from erosion. The impact of daily tidal ebb and flow - and even the extreme action of storm surge or tsunami movements - are moderated by this botanical line of defense. And the mangroves can assist in filtering and maintaining water and air quality by sequestering CO2 and helping the sediments to retain gases and heavy metals.
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Read an abstract of the research study.
Read more about the study in Earth News.
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