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ABC News
ABC News
National

Ecophysiological modelling predicts mass marine-life extinction by the year 2300 if global warming continues

The ecophysiological modelling predicts tropical oceans would lose the most species. (Troy Mayne/WWF)

By the year 2300, life in the oceans faces a mass die-off rivalling the great extinctions of Earth's deep past if humanity fails to curb greenhouse gas emissions, according to a study in the journal Science.

But limiting planetary warming to two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels will stave off such a catastrophe, said the paper's authors, Justin Penn and Curtis Deutsch, both affiliated with the University of Washington and Princeton University.

The authors used ecophysiological modelling to weigh species' physical limits with projected marine temperatures and depletion of oxygen levels — a task that was particularly challenging given a lack of previous work in the area.

The results were alarming: under "business as usual" warming, marine ecosystems planet-wide could experience a mass extinction comparable to that of the end-Permian extinction, known as the "Great Dying."

This occurred 250 million years ago and led to the demise of more than two-thirds of marine animals, because of warming and oxygen depletion, similar conditions that are occurring today.

The preferred warming goal of 1.5C is said to be impossible to achieve under current agreements, according to the UN.  (Supplied: CSIRO)

While the tropical oceans would lose the most species, many from these areas would migrate to higher latitudes in order to survive.

On the other hand, polar species would disappear en masse, since their types of habitat would disappear from the planet entirely.

Limiting warming to 2C, the upper limit of goal set by the Paris agreement, "would cut the severity of extinctions by  less than 70 per cent, avoiding a marine mass extinction," the paper said.

The preferred goal, of limiting warming to 1.5C, is impossible to achieve with current international commitments, according to United Nations climate experts.

"Exactly where the future falls between the best-case and worst-case scenarios will be determined by the choices that society makes not only about climate change, but also about habitat destruction, overfishing, and coastal pollution."

AFP

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