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Cool water surges could affect fish stocks-report
01 Feb 2007 19:58:12 GMT
Source: Reuters

PARIS, Feb 1 (Reuters) - Surges of cool waters from the depths of the Atlantic Ocean became stronger off Morocco in the 20th century, apparently because of global warming that could affect fish stocks, a study showed on Thursday.

The report, in the journal Science, said there was evidence of similar upwellings in the Arabian Sea, off California, Peru and Chile, also apparently driven by higher temperatures and shifts in winds tied to greenhouse gases.

The upwellings could be commercially important because areas where cooler waters rise near coasts provide about 20 percent of the world's fish catch even though they cover less than one percent of the world's ocean surface, they said.

But the scientists, at research institutes in Germany, Australia and Romania, did not predict whether fish stocks would get bigger or smaller because of the increased upwelling.

"Upwelling regions...show extremely high levels of biological activity, yet the ecosystem response in these regions is dependent on a complex balance of temperature, ocean chemistry, ocean circulation, and fishing pressure," it said.

The report, reconstructing a 2,500-year record of temperatures based on seabed sediments off Morocco, said surface waters were the coolest from 1965-98 because of cool waters from the depths.

"These results strongly imply that upwelling may continue to intensify with future increased levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide and global warming," Helen Victoria McGregor of the University of Bremen and co-authors wrote.

Almost all scientists say that a build-up of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, mainly from burning fossil fuels, is blanketing the planet and driving up temperatures.
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Tribal women get water from a hand pump in a refugee camp in the Maoist prone forest area near Bhairamgarh village, about 400 km (248 miles) south of the central Indian city of Raipur March 18, 2007. Thousands of tribal people in this central state of Chhattisgarh have seen ancestral lands turned into a war zone of landmines, ambushes and refugee camps as a 40-year-old Maoist insurgency in India gathers momentum. The region is now a stronghold of up to 4,000 well-armed Maoists, police say, who freely roam the forests of southern Chhattisgarh in what locals call the "red zone". Picture taken March 18, 2007. To match feature INDIA-MAOISTS/TRIBALS