Five islands have
disappeared in the Pacific's Solomon Islands due to rising sea levels and
coastal erosion, according to an Australian study that could provide valuable
insights for future research.
AFP
report continues:
A
further six reef islands have been severely eroded in the remote area of the
Solomons, the study said, with one experiencing some 10 houses being swept into
the sea between 2011 and 2014.
"At
least 11 islands across the northern Solomon Islands have either totally
disappeared over recent decades or are currently experiencing severe erosion,"
the study published in Environmental Research Letters said.
"Shoreline
recession at two sites has destroyed villages that have existed since at least
1935, leading to community relocations."
The
scientists said the five that had vanished were all vegetated reef islands up
to five hectares (12 acres) that were occasionally used by fishermen but not
populated.
"They
were not just little sand islands," leader author Simon Albert told AFP.
It
is feared that the rise in sea levels will cause widespread erosion and
inundation of low-lying atolls in the Pacific.
Albert,
a senior research fellow at the University of Queensland, said the Solomons was
considered a sea-level hotspot because rises there are almost three times
higher than the global average.
The
researchers looked at 33 islands using aerial and satellite imagery from 1947
to 2014, combined with historical insight from local knowledge.
They
found that rates of shoreline recession were substantially higher in areas
exposed to high wave energy, indicating a "synergistic interaction"
between sea-level rise and waves, which Albert said could prove useful for
future study.
Those
islands which were exposed to higher wave energy -- in addition to sea-level
rise -- were found to have a greatly accelerated loss compared with the more
sheltered islands.
"This
provides a bit of an insight into the future," he said.
"There's
these global trends that are happening but the local responses can be very,
very localized."
For
now, some communities in the Solomons are already adapting to the changed
conditions.
"In addition to these village relocations, Taro, the capital of Choiseul Province is set to become the first provincial capital globally to relocate residents and services due to the threat of sea-level rise," the study said.
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