Fourth Global Coral Bleaching Event
Context: The ongoing Fourth Global Coral Bleaching Event has already impacted 84 percent of the ocean’s reefs as per the International Coral Reef Initiative.
- The impacted reefs span at least 83 countries and territories.
About Global Coral Bleaching Event
- Fourth Event: The ongoing bleaching event beginning in 2023 is the largest on record with 84% of the world’s reefs impacted.
- Third Event: The third-largest bleaching period, between 2014 and 2017, impacted 68.2% of reefs.
- The first and second global coral bleaching events occurred in 1998 and 2010, respectively.
About Coral Bleaching
- Coral Bleaching is an event where the Corals expels the symbiotic relationship it has with the algae called zooxanthellae and turns white.
- Symbiotic Relationship: These algae provide the corals with food and oxygen, and in return, the corals provide them with a safe place to live.
- Reasons:
- High Ocean Temperatures: The average annual sea surface temperature of oceans in 2024 away from the poles was a record 20.87 degrees Celsius.
- Climate Change: Rising greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere lead to increased heat absorption by the oceans, raising sea surface temperatures.
- 2024 was the hottest year on record.
- Pollution: Runoff from land can carry pollutants that damage corals and their symbiotic algae
About the International Coral Reef Initiative (ICRI)
- ICRI is an informal global partnership striving to preserve coral reefs and related ecosystems around the world.
- Formation: The Initiative was founded in 1994 and was announced at the First Conference of the Parties of the Convention on Biological Diversity in December 1994.
- Objective: To encourage the adoption of best practice in sustainable management of coral reefs and associated ecosystems
Endangered Vultures Get New Home in Maharashtra
Context: On Earth Day 2025, 34 critically endangered vultures, 20 long-billed and 14 white-rumped vultures were transferred from Jatayu Conservation Breeding Centre (JCBC), Pinjore to Maharashtra for wild reintroduction.
- The successful relocation to Melghat, Pench, and Tadoba-Andhari Tiger Reserves in Maharashtra aims to reestablish wild populations.
About Long-Billed Vultures
- The long-billed vulture (Gyps indicus) is a large scavenger bird native to the Indian subcontinent, primarily found in cliffs and rocky outcrops in central and peninsular India.
- Ecological Role: These vultures play a vital ecological role by feeding on animal carcasses, thus preventing the spread of diseases.
- Threats: They have suffered massive population declines due to the veterinary use of the drug diclofenac, which is toxic to them when ingested via cattle carcasses.
- Conservation Status: Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List.
About White-Rumped Vultures
- The white-rumped vulture (Gyps bengalensis) is one of the smallest species among Gyps vultures and is historically found across South and Southeast Asia.
- Habitat: Inhabits open country, near human settlements and agricultural lands, often nesting on tall trees or buildings.
- Threat: It faces a severe population crash due to diclofenac poisoning and habitat loss.
- Conservation Status: Critically Endangered by the IUCN.
Antibiotic Pollution: Study
Context: A recent study published in PNAS Nexus warns that 6 million km of rivers worldwide are contaminated with antibiotics at levels that can harm ecosystems.
What is Antibiotics?
- Antibiotics are strong medicines that help fight infections caused by bacteria.
What is Antibiotic Pollution?
- Antibiotic pollution refers to the contamination of the environment, especially water bodies like rivers, lakes, and oceans, with antibiotics.
Key Highlights of the Study on Antibiotic Pollution in Rivers
- Extent of Antibiotic Pollution in Rivers
- 80% of India’s river lengths might face environmental and health risks due to antibiotic pollution.
- Global study revealed that 29% of consumed antibiotics end up in rivers, and 11% reach oceans and lakes.
- Impact of Antibiotic Pollution: Antibiotics are not fully metabolized in the human body and not entirely removed by standard wastewater treatment processes.
- Rising Antibiotic Usage: Human consumption of antibiotics increased by 65% between 2000 and 2015.
- Contributions to Pollution by Specific Antibiotics: Cefixime, used to treat bronchitis, the largest contributor to antibiotic pollution in Indian rivers.
Right to Cool
Context: Legal recognition for the ‘right to cool’ along with some initiatives has been proposed to protect India’s informal workforce from the extreme summer temperatures.
About The Right to Cool
- The “right to cool” is not a formally recognized legal right yet but a developmental concept.
- It advocates an equitable and sustainable approach to cooling, recognising the access to reasonable temperature comfort as a fundamental human need.
Suggested Measures to Adopt
- Article 21: Make ‘Right to Cool’ a part of the fundamental right under Article 21 mandating cooling infrastructures for the most vulnerable population.
- Heat Action Plans: Enforceable City-level heat action plans need to be prepared with measures like, non-negotiable paid time off, water stations and cooling shelters on red-alert days.
- Gender-Responsive Urban Planning: To plan with gender-disaggregated data creating shaded, child-friendly workspaces, accessible public toilets and safe rest zones near marketplaces.
- Public Transport Connectivity: Urban planning should focus on realising end-to-end connectivity in public transport
- Heat risk Mapping: There is a need for hyperlocal ward level climate-risk mapping and participatory planning to tailor solutions to community needs
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