More troubleĀ for corals Greg Torda
The bad news for Australiaās Great Barrier Reef just keeps on getting worse.
Last month, scientists from James Cook University in Townsville, Australia, reported that the northern third of the reef was severely bleached in 2016. Well over half the corals there were lostĀ in that event.
Today, the same team announced that the central portion of the reef, a popular tourist area, is now suffering a similar fate. Corals bleachĀ ā and can dieĀ ā when stresses such as abnormal heat make them expel their symbiotic algae.
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In 2016, the bleaching was caused by El NiƱo, a periodic global climate event that heats up a vast band of the oceanās surface in the equatorial Pacific.
But this yearās bleaching is occurring during a so-called ānormalā year without such an event.
āThe water is just too damn hot,ā says Terry Hughes, the leader of the survey, who fears that climate change is creating a new norm that corals are unable to endure.
Hughes flew over the worst-affected area in a small aircraft to investigateĀ the gradual whitening of the reef, which started to be noticeable in early February. Nearly 200 divers have also been documenting the destruction under the waves.
Recovery fears
It will take up to nine months to find out how many of the bleached corals end up dying, but Hughes fears that the central reef may have been nearly as badly damaged this year as the northern part was last year, when 67 per cent of the corals were lost there.
āOur combined 2016 and 2017 surveys show that two-thirds of the Great Barrier Reef has now been badly degraded,ā says Hughes.
It is a loss that under normal circumstances would take a decade to recover from. āBut now that bleaching is happening every year or every other year in some areas, recovery will be difficult if not impossible,ā he says.
āThis is really scary, because the Great Barrier Reef is losing its insurance policy,ā says marine biologist Randi Rotjan at Boston University in Massachusetts. āThe scale of the devastation means that it is losing its potential to reseed the parts of the reef that were previously damaged.ā
Read more: Face-to-face with Great Barrier Reef’s worst coral bleaching
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