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| Indonesia has some of the world's finest corals but many are also badly damaged |
More than a third of Indonesia's coral reefs are in bad condition, scientists said Tuesday, raising concerns about the future of the archipelago's vast marine ecosystem.
The
precarious state of the country's coral reefs was revealed after a survey of 1067
sites across the sprawling country of more than 17,000 islands.
Scientists
from Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI) found that just 6.5 percent
Indonesia's coral reefs were in excellent condition, while 36 percent are in
bad condition. Some 34 percent in sufficient condition with the rest classifed
as being in good condition.
"Anthropogenic
factors are having more influence on the condition of corals in Indonesia
today," Dr Dirhamsyah, head of the institute's oceanographic research
centre, said in a statement.
"The
use of coast has increased which can threaten the ecosystem."
Dirhamsyah,
who like many Indonesians has only one name, said greater public awareness was
needed "for the survival of marine life" in Indonesia.
Indonesia
has one of the most extensive coral reef systems in the world and more people
live close to reefs than anywhere else on the planet, according to the Coral
Reef Alliance.
But the
giant living organisms face a number of threats, including man-made climate
change, destructive fishing techniques and nutrient and sediment loading.
Indonesia
is also the world's second biggest contributor to marine debris after China,
producing an estimated 1.29 million metric tons annually.
Conservation
group WWF warned last month up to half of the globe's shallow-water reefs,
which support a quarter of all marine life, have already been wiped out.
If humanity
fails to keep global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit)
above pre-industrial levels, coral mortality is likely to hit 70-90 percent by
the middle of the century, the United Nations warned in a recent report.
Indonesia
is part of the Coral Triangle, the most biodiverse marine area on earth which
passes through six countries, including the Philippines, Papua New Guinea and
the Solomon Islands.

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