Considerable attention has focused on the climatic effects of global climate change on biodiversity, but few analyses and
no broad assessments have evaluated effects of sea-level rise on biodiversity. Taking advantage of new maps of marine intrusion
under scenarios of 1 and 6 m sea-level rise, we calculated areal losses for all terrestrial ecoregions globally, with areal
losses for particular ecoregions ranging from nil to complete. Marine intrusion is a global phenomenon, but its effects are
most prominent in Southeast Asia and nearby islands, eastern North America, northeastern South America, and western Alaska.
Making assumptions regarding faunal responses to reduced distributional areas of species endemic to ecoregions, we estimated
likely numbers of extinctions caused by sea-level rise, and found that marine-intrusion-caused extinctions of narrow endemics
are likely to be most prominent in northeastern South America, although anticipated extinctions in smaller numbers are scattered
worldwide. This assessment serves as a complement to recent estimates of losses owing to changing climatic conditions, considering
a dimension of biodiversity consequences of climate change that has not previously been taken into account.
Keywords Climate change - Sea-level change - Marine intrusion - Biodiversity - Ecoregions - Endemic species - Extinction