Climate Change in Freshwaters – A call to action

World Aquatic Scientific Societies, are highlighting the immense threats faced by aquatic ecosystems and call for urgent action on climate change, during the ongoing COP26 summit. Freshwaters are disproportionately important and disproportionately at risk from climate change and other human pressures. Freshwater ecosystems host 10 times the biodiversity per area than the land and the sea, although they are often overlooked.

Freshwater vertebrate populations are declining at a rate almost double that of those on land and in the sea surface, while the planet’s lakes are warming much faster, on average at almost three times the rate of the latter. And yet freshwaters are severely underrated in calls for action on climate change and the global biodiversity crisis. The Convention on Biological Diversity’s framework “to preserve and protect nature and its essential services to people” focuses on the land and the sea, overlooking the pivotal role of freshwaters in the earth system.

The Freshwater Biological Association, echo the call from WWF and the World Aquatic Scientific Societies to encourage world leaders to recognise the extraordinary importance of freshwaters. This is easily achieved by making a small textual change – focus on the land, freshwaters, and the sea. That tiny change has huge implications for the natural world and our place in it. Freshwater ecosystems must no longer be an afterthought. They are the planet’s most essential support for life – human and beyond. 

The Freshwater Biological Association is an independent membership association and registered charity, dedicated to understanding and conserving freshwaters across the globe. They have long worked to protect our global freshwaters by facilitating innovative research in the field and making information about these environments easily accessible.

Their vision is to be the leading independent UK organisation for freshwater information and advice by promoting the sustainable management of freshwater ecosystems and resources, using the very best available science. They provide essential conservation actions, long-term data, and training to equip amateurs and professionals to engage with the nature and climate emergencies.