Climate change will bring greater biodiversity to world seas

Tropical marine animals that currently thrive in warm habitats around the equator will have to spread north and south to avoid extinction as global sea temperatures rise, a study has found.

Climate change will bring greater biodiversity to world seas
Dolphins of Isle of Barra, Scotland [Credit: SAMS]
Scientists at the Scottish Association for Marine Science (SAMS), alongside international partners, modelled data for nearly 13,000 marine species and found that by the end of this century, countries either side of the Tropics would have a greater variety of marine species, while the Tropics would suffer a nett loss.

The study, published in the journal Nature Climate Change, is based on global climate models and is the most comprehensive to date on expected shifts in marine animal populations. It shows that such shifts are likely, even if carbon emissions were reduced over the forthcoming decades.

SAMS marine ecologist Professor Michael Burrows, who devised the study, said the prediction of increased biodiversity away from the Tropics contrasted the general message of climate change causing widespread extinctions.