Indian Ocean Warming Threatens Severe Cyclones, Heavy Rainfall And Marine Ecosystems: Study
Last Updated: May 01, 2024, 00:29 IST Pune (Poona) [Poona], India Two sperm whales are seen swimming on the Indian Ocean surface during the Greenpeace’s Arctic Sunrise expedition at the Saya de Malha Bank within the Mascarene Plateau, Mauritius March 14, 2021. (Reuters) Study warns of severe cyclones, heavy rainfall, and marine heatwaves in Indian Ocean due to warming, impacting coastal livelihoods and marine ecosystems A recent study has sounded a stark warning about the warming of the Indian Ocean, predicting that it will worsen cyclones, heavy rainfall events, and lead the world’s third-largest water body into a near-permanent heatwave state. Led by Roxy Mathew Koll of the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology in Pune, the study underlines that the Indian Ocean and its surrounding nations are at the highest risk of natural disasters. With 40 countries bordering the ocean, housing a third of the global population, changes in the region’s climate carry significant societal and economic implications. What does the future Indian Ocean look like?1/ The warming in the Indian Ocean was strongest during …