The Lion's Pride , Vol. 5 (Feb. 2016) | Page 100

(Miller, Shishido, Antrim, and Bowlby, 2013, p. 99). Acidification affects cold-water corals earlier and more vigorously than warm-water reefs because at deeper depths seawater is less saturated with carbonate. Cold-water reef systems are enormous havens of biodiversity for hundreds of marine species, so maintaining healthy coral reefs provides beneficial habitat for coral-dependent organisms and helps create complex reef habitats. Chronic exposure to high CO2 leads to diminished complex coral structures, with long-term consequences resulting in coral die- off, habitat loss, and decreased diversity of coral species and the symbiotic organisms that depend on them (Fabricius, De’ath, Noonan and Uthicke, 2013, p. 2). Rising tides from the effects of polar ice-melt due to global warming will flood coastal environments, impacting marine ecosystems, gradually weakening susceptible shorelines, and displacing indigenous communities that depend on the sea for their survival. The impact of rising sea levels will put stress on coastal estuaries and mangroves, causing habitat destruction that affects many species living within these ecosystems. Some of the animal life would be lost due to habitat destruction where there would be no alternative habitat for them to use.