Two-thirds of Great Barrier Reef hit by mass coral bleaching
PTI
Published Apr 10, 2017, 1:39 pm IST
Updated Apr 10, 2017, 1:41 pm IST
The bleaching is caused by record-breaking temperatures driven by global warming.
For
the second time in just 12 months, scientists have recorded severe
coral bleaching across huge tracts of the Great Barrier Reef after
completing aerial surveys along its entire length. (Photo: Pixabay)
Melbourne: Two-thirds of Australia's iconic Great
Barrier Reef has been damaged by back-to-back severe bleaching events
caused by record-breaking temperatures, scientists warned today, adding
the reefs affected last year have zero prospect of recovery.
For the second time in just 12 months, scientists have recorded
severe coral bleaching across huge tracts of the Great Barrier Reef
after completing aerial surveys along its entire length. Last year,
bleaching was most severe in the northern third of the Reef, while one
year on, the middle third has experienced the most intense coral
bleaching.
"This is the fourth time the Great Barrier Reef has bleached severely
- in 1998, 2002, 2016, and now in 2017," said James Kerry from James
Cook University in Australia, who undertook the aerial surveys. "It
takes at least a decade for a full recovery of even the fastest growing
corals, so mass bleaching events 12 months apart offers zero prospect of
recovery for reefs that were damaged in 2016," Kerry said.
The aerial surveys this year covered more than 8,000 kilometres (km)
and scored nearly 800 individual coral reefs closely matching the aerial
surveys last year that were carried out by the same two observers. "The
combined impact of this back-to-back bleaching stretches for 1,500 km,
leaving only the southern third unscathed," said Terry Hughes, Director
of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at James Cook
University.
"The bleaching is caused by record-breaking temperatures driven by
global warming. This year, 2017, we are seeing mass bleaching, even
without the assistance of El Nino conditions," said Hughes, who
undertook the aerial surveys. Coupled with this year's mass bleaching
event, Tropical Cyclone Debbie struck a corridor of the Great Barrier
Reef at the end of March, researchers said.
The intense, slow-moving system was likely to have caused varying
levels of damage along a path up to 100 kilometres in width. Any cooling
effects related to the cyclone are likely to be negligible in relation
to the damage it caused, which
unfortunately struck a section of the reef that had largely escaped the worst of the bleaching.
"Clearly the reef is struggling with multiple impacts," said Hughes.
"Without a doubt the most pressing of these is global warming. As
temperatures continue to rise the corals will experience more and more
of these events: One degree Celsius of warming so far has already caused
four events in the past
19 years," Hughes added.
"Ultimately, we need to cut carbon emissions, and the window to do so
is rapidly closing," said Hughes. Coral bleaching occurs when abnormal
environmental
conditions, like heightened sea temperatures, cause corals to expel tiny photosynthetic algae, called 'zooxanthellae'.
The loss of these colourful algae causes the corals to turn white,
and bleach. Bleached corals can recover if the temperature drops and
zooxanthellae are able to recolonise them, otherwise the coral may die |
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