This is not a warning but a dire wake-up call. Current changes across the continent, and their potential outcomes, pose an existential threat to our survival. But there are actions we can take to help protect or restore ecosystems.
In 1992, 1,700 scientists warned that human beings and the natural world were “on a collision course”. Seventeen years later, scientists described planetary boundaries within which humans and other life could have a “safe space to operate”. These are environmental thresholds, such as the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and changes in land use.
Crossing such boundaries was considered a risk that would cause environmental changes so profound, they genuinely posed an existential threat to humanity.
This grave reality is what our major research paper confronts.
In what may be the most comprehensive evaluation of the environmental state of play in Australia, we show major and iconic ecosystems are collapsing across the continent and into Antarctica. These systems sustain life, and evidence of their demise shows we’re exceeding planetary boundaries.
We found 19 Australian ecosystems met our criteria to be classified as “collapsing”. This includes the arid interior, savannas and mangroves of northern Australia, the Great Barrier Reef, Shark Bay, southern Australia’s kelp and alpine ash forests, tundra on Macquarie Island, and moss beds in Antarctica.
We define collapse as the state where ecosystems have changed in a substantial, negative way from their original state – such as species or habitat loss, or reduced vegetation or coral cover – and are unlikely to recover.
The good and bad news
Ecosystems consist of living and non-living components, and their interactions. They work like a super-complex engine: when some components are removed or stop working, knock-on consequences can lead to system failure.
Our study is based on measured data and observations, not modelling or predictions for the future. Encouragingly, not all ecosystems we examined have collapsed across their entire range. We still have, for instance, some intact reefs on the Great Barrier Reef, especially in deeper waters. And northern Australia has some of the most intact and least-modified stretches of savanna woodlands on Earth.
Still, collapses are happening, including in regions critical for growing food. This includes the Murray-Darling Basin, which covers about 14% of Australia’s landmass. Its rivers and other freshwater systems support more than 30% of Australia’s food production.
The effects of floods, fires, heatwaves and storms do not stop at farm gates; they’re felt equally in agricultural areas and natural ecosystems. We shouldn’t forget how towns ran out of drinking water during the recent drought.
Drinking water is also at risk when ecosystems collapse in our water catchments. In Victoria, for example, the degradation of giant Mountain Ash forests greatly reduces the amount of water flowing through the Thompson catchment, threatening the drinking water of nearly five million people in Melbourne.
This is a dire wake-up call — not just a warning. Put bluntly, current changes across the continent, and their potential outcomes, pose an existential threat to our survival, and other life we share environments with.
In investigating patterns of collapse, we found most ecosystems experience multiple, concurrent pressures from both global climate change and regional human impacts (such as land clearing). Pressures are often additive and extreme.
Take the last 11 years in Western Australia as an example. In the summer of 2010 and 2011, a heatwave spanning more than 300,000 square kilometres ravaged both marine and land ecosystems. The extreme heat devastated forests and woodlands, kelp forests, seagrass meadows and coral reefs. This catastrophe was followed by two cyclones.
A record-breaking, marine heatwave in late 2019 dealt a further blow. And another marine heatwave is predicted for this April.
What to do about it?
Our brains trust comprises 38 experts from 21 universities, CSIRO and the federal Department of Agriculture Water and Environment. Beyond quantifying and reporting more doom and gloom, we asked the question: what can be done?
We devised a simple but tractable scheme called the 3As:
- Awareness of what is important
- Anticipation of what is coming down the line
- Action to stop the pressures or deal with impacts.
In our paper, we identify actions to help protect or restore ecosystems. Many are already happening. In some cases, ecosystems might be better left to recover by themselves, such as coral after a cyclone.
In other cases, active human intervention will be required – for example, placing artificial nesting boxes for Carnaby’s black cockatoos in areas where old trees have been removed.
“Future-ready” actions are also vital. This includes reinstating cultural burning practices, which have multiple values and benefits for Aboriginal communities and can help minimise the risk and strength of bushfires.
It might also include replanting banks along the Murray River with species better suited to warmer conditions.
Some actions may be small and localised, but have substantial positive benefits.
For example, billions of migrating Bogong moths, the main summer food for critically endangered mountain pygmy possums, have not arrived in their typical numbers in Australian alpine regions in recent years. This was further exacerbated by the 2019-20 fires. Brilliantly, Zoos Victoria anticipated this pressure and developed supplementary food — Bogong bikkies.
Other more challenging, global or large-scale actions must address the root cause of environmental threats, such as human population growth and per-capita consumption of environmental resources.
We must rapidly reduce greenhouse gas emissions to net-zero, remove or suppress invasive species such as feral cats and buffel grass, and stop widespread land clearing and other forms of habitat destruction.
Our lives depend on it
The multiple ecosystem collapses we have documented in Australia are a harbinger for environments globally. The simplicity of the 3As is to show people can do something positive, either at the local level of a landcare group, or at the level of government departments and conservation agencies.
Our lives and those of our children, as well as our economies, societies and cultures, depend on it.
We simply cannot afford any further delay.
This article, republished from The Conversation, was written by:
, Principal Research Scientist, University of Wollongong
, Professor in Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, Centre for Integrative Ecology, School of Life & Environmental Sciences, Deakin University
, Professor, Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University
, Professor and Chair, Environment and Human Health, University of Exeter
The Conversation is a network of not-for-profit media outlets that publish news stories on the Internet that are written by academics and researchers, under a Creative Commons — Attribution/No derivatives license.

Comments
8 responses to “‘Existential threat to our survival’: 19 Australian ecosystems already collapsing”
The seriousness of the situation is some what difficult for many to fathom, land clearing for example, instead of reducing land clearing it might be important to point out there is very little left to clear, south east Queensland and even to west is a perfect example.
In addition how much longer can we exploit the aquifers in our bread baskets, how many more years do we have before the water extracted is unusable? how much soil do we have left? what percentage of farming practices currently in use are remotely close to sustainable particularly with increasing temperatures.
In all honesty our government should be in a panic, dropping everything and funnelling everything we have into a sustainable future and not giving our future away to multi nationals growing almonds and cotton which will grind to a halt soon enough.
What is our future, desalination plants pumping water for growing our food hydroponically in ex underground coal mines?
One only has to drive from Hay to Balranald to see what an erstwhile cotton industry inflicts on the landscape. This is an area where literally nothing grows.
Professor Will Steffen of ANU, one of the world’ s leading climate change scientists, gives us the biomass fractions of all animals on Earth’s continents. Given that we are living on Earth, biomass can be simply referred to as the weight of animals including human beings. The proportions of different groups is astounding.
Domestic animals = 67% (1)
Human beings = 30%
Animals still living in the wild = 3%
Thinking in terms of having only 3% of all animals left in the wild, we do not have any species to loose.
(1) Includes all animals used for food resources, textile sources, animal farm labor in poorer countries, and pets etc.
John Barilaro Deputy Premier and national party leader says NSW needs water infrastructure fast, and amphibians can’t stand in the way.
‘If frogs die, so be it’ Behind a pay wall
Deputy Prime Minister and fed national party leader Michael McCormack
“There are huge challenges in 2021 and we’re not worried, well I’m certainly not worried, about what might happen in 30 years’ time,” he said.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-02-07/michael-mccormack-flags-excluding-agriculture-climate-target/13130160
Here endith the lesson, National party style.
He’s a shocker. It’s worth watching Friendlyjordies’ videos on Barilaro on Youtube, he gets right to the heart of it. Barilaro couldn’t careless if all koala’s died in this country, he’s very bad news, but Gladys is no better, she caves into him every time.
Then consider the water consumption of these domestic animals in Australia alone, not even including crop irrigation for feed or slaughter is staggering. Just cattle alone grass fed or in feedlots the water is being pulled from the ground and bores are continually sunk deeper and deeper as demand continues to increase.
What happens when it stops? We look for Elon Musk and Mars? We really are stark raving mad.
Absolutely, you are spot on. And also think of the methane CH4 released as well. It is totally unsustainable. And then there is the nitrous oxide N2O from farming due to overuse of nitrogenous fertilisers which is an even worse greenhouse gas in effect compared to methane.
We have gone past 350pp CO2 concentration directly measured in the atmosphere where the tipping points or feedback mechanisms started. Now at 415 ppm. Adding CH4 and N2O concentrations and that makes the equivalent of 500ppm CO2.
We are mad, and completely in denial. And all that you see the media want is to continue the dream and get back to business as usual. Consumer society as it is can go on forever.
The catastrophic implications are already affecting us and could last for hundreds maybe thousands of years.
A recent local forum on water in the WA wheatbelt saw farmers urging government to increase water allocations so they can conduct this season’s pre-planting regime. They need tons of water per hectare as a medium for their insecticides and herbicides.
On farm storage uses profitable land, tree planting to combat salinity limits machine size and organic practices aren’t profitable enough.