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Anthropogenic nitrogen pollution threats and challenges to the health of South Asian coral reefs

Frontiers in Marine Science 2023 23 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
R.S. Robin, Stuart C. Painter, R.S. Robin, R.S. Robin, R.S. Robin, R.S. Robin, R.S. Robin, R.S. Robin, Yuri Artioli, Yuri Artioli, R.S. Robin, R.S. Robin, R.S. Robin, R.S. Robin, R.S. Robin, Hana Amir, Yuri Artioli, Jessica Arnull, R.S. Robin, R.S. Robin, R.S. Robin, Jessica Arnull, R.S. Robin, Raja S. Ganeshram, Raja S. Ganeshram, R. Ramesh, R. Ramesh, Nizam Ibrahim, R. Raghuraman, R. Raghuraman, Nizam Ibrahim, V. Deepak Samuel, R. Ramesh, R.S. Robin, R.S. Robin, R. Raghuraman, V. Deepak Samuel, R. Raghuraman, R. Ramesh, V. Deepak Samuel, R. Ramesh, R. Ramesh, R. Ramesh, Arjan Rajasuriya, Arjan Rajasuriya, Olivia Rendón, Aminath Shazly, Aminath Shazly, Anne M. Wilson, Alexander W. Tudhope, Alexander W. Tudhope

Summary

Researchers assessed the evidence for nitrogen pollution impacts on coral reefs in the waters around India, Sri Lanka, and the Maldives. They found that while nitrogen pollution is a widespread and growing problem in the region's coastal waters, there is currently limited direct evidence linking it to coral reef decline. The study calls for more targeted research to understand how nitrogen pollution interacts with other stressors like warming and ocean acidification to threaten South Asian coral ecosystems.

Study Type Environmental

Nitrogen pollution is a widespread and growing problem in the coastal waters of South Asia yet the ecological impacts on the region’s coral ecosystems are currently poorly known and understood. South Asia hosts just under 7% of global coral reef coverage but has experienced significant and widespread coral loss in recent decades. The extent to which this coral ecosystem decline at the regional scale can be attributed to the multiple threats posed by nitrogen pollution has been largely overlooked in the literature. Here, we assess the evidence for nitrogen pollution impacts on corals in the central Indian Ocean waters of India, Sri Lanka and the Maldives. We find that there is currently limited evidence with which to clearly demonstrate widespread impacts on coral reefs from nitrogen pollution, including from its interactions with other stressors such as seawater warming. However, this does not prove there are no significant impacts, but rather it reflects the paucity of appropriate observations and related understanding of the range of potential impacts of nitrogen pollution at individual, species and ecosystem levels. This situation presents significant research, management and conservation challenges given the wide acceptance that such pollution is problematic. Following from this, we recommend more systematic collection and sharing of robust observations, modelling and experimentation to provide the baseline on which to base prescient pollution control action.

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