An aerial survey of the northern Great Barrier Reef has shown that 95 per cent of the reefs are now severely bleached — far worse than previously thought.
Professor Terry Hughes, a coral reef expert based at James Cook University in Townsville who led the survey team, said the situation is now critical.
“This will change the Great Barrier Reef forever,” Professor Hughes told 7.30.
“We’re seeing huge levels of bleaching in the northern thousand-kilometre stretch of the Great Barrier Reef.”
Of the 520 reefs he surveyed, only four showed no evidence of bleaching.
From Cairns to the Torres Strait, the once colourful ribbons of reef are a ghostly white.
“It’s too early to tell precisely how many of the bleached coral will die, but judging from the extreme level even the most robust corals are snow white, I’d expect to see about half of those corals die in the coming month or so,” Professor Hughes said.
Coral bleaching is caused by abnormally high sea temperatures that kill the tiny marine algae essential to coral health.
This is the third global coral bleaching since 1998, and scientists have found no evidence of these disasters before the late 20th century.
“We have coral cores that provide 400 years of annual growth,” explains Dr Neal Cantin from the Australian Institute of Marine Science.
“We don’t see the signatures of bleaching in reduced growth following a bleaching event until the recent 1998/2000 events.”
Environment Minister Greg Hunt flew over the reef just eight days ago, before Professor Hughes’ aerial survey, and announced some additional resources for monitoring the reef.
“There’s good and bad news — the bottom three quarters of the reef is in strong condition,” he said at the time.
“[But] as we head north of Lizard Island it becomes increasingly prone to bleaching.”
The northern part of the Great Barrier Reef is the most pristine part of the marine park — and that is one possible glimmer of hope.
“On the bright side, it’s more likely that these pristine reefs in the northern section will be better able to bounce back afterwards,” Professor Hughes said.
“Nonetheless we’re looking at 10-year recovery period, so this is a very severe blow.”
‘We’re seeing climate change play out across our reefs’
Professor Justin Marshall, a reef scientist from the University of Queensland, said the reason for these bleaching events was clear.
“What we’re seeing now is unequivocally to do with climate change,” he told 7.30.
“The world has agreed, this is climate change, we’re seeing climate change play out across our reefs.”
Professor Hughes said he is frustrated about the whole climate change debate.
“The government has not been listening to us for the past 20 years,” he said.
“It has been inevitable that this bleaching event would happen, and now it has.
“We need to join the global community in reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
“For me, personally, it was devastating to look out of the chopper window and see reef after reef destroyed by bleaching.
“But really the emotion is not so much sadness as anger.
“I’m really angry that the government isn’t listening to us, to the evidence we’ve been providing to them since 1998.”
Mr Hunt told 7.30 that he was confident in the advice from the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority — that the southern and central parts of the reef had so far escaped serious bleaching.
He said the Government had committed $2 billion over the next decade to protect the reef through initiatives such as improving water quality and removing the crown-of-thorns starfish.
A spokesperson for the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority said it would be following up the aerial surveys with in-water surveys over the next two weeks to determine the true extent of the coral bleaching.
This post originally appeared on ABC News.
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Top Comments
Yawn, more propaganda from the Greenies which the ABC so love to peddle.
The GBR is evolving and there has been 'scares' going on for decades, but this global warming/climate change/extreme weather event has been a godsend as it gives those same Greenies something to hang their hat on.
There is obviously some seriously big money in keeping this particular scare going/alive.
So you'd rather the coral just dies?
Wow! You are a person.
Fantastic response, so well thought out. Shucks Ali, you must be exhausted after all that brain strain.
Rest easy, the coral is not dying.
But but but climate change doesn't exist dont you know, Tony and his cronies told us so
I think you're being deliberately obtuse. I doubt you would find anyone that you would call a 'denier' who would actually deny that 'climate change' exists. Climate change obviously exists, and it has since the dawn of time.
What you're actually referring to, is anthropogenic climate change, the belief that climate change is caused by man, particularly the carbon dioxide emissions that we all create.
Unfortunately for you, there is absolutely zero evidence that climate change is caused by man, or our carbon dioxide emissions.
If you're going to disparage the beliefs of a certain group of people, you might as well be accurate in your description.
So how do explain coral bleaching only becoming a problem from the late 90s onwards? Why have the scientists not seen any evidence of it occurring at other points in time?
Anthropogenic climate change is real, and the longer people take to act on it, the more of the world's natural beauty we will lose. Even if you don't believe it's real, what is the harm in reducing your carbon footprint? Would anything bad happen if the world reduced its reliance on fossil fuels and switched off the lights once in a while? The problem isn't whether anthropogenic climate change exists or not, it's that people and governments use it not existing as an excuse to not change poor habits.
In that case Turnbull should repeal Abbott's Climate Change Direction Action Plan:
- $3.2 billion dollars on the Restoring the Balance in the Murray-Darling Basin Program
- $2.55 billion dollars on the Emissions Reduction Fund
- $1 billion dollars on the Clean Energy Innovation Fund
- $1 billion dollars on the National Landcare Programme
- $626 million dollars on the On-Farm Irrigation Efficiency Programme
- $142.5 million dollars on the National Environmental Science Programme
- $140 million dollars on the Great Barrier Reef Trust
- $50 million dollars on the 20 Million Trees Programme
- $9 million dollars on the National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility
- $2.1 million dollars on the Solar Towns Programme
- Green Army Placements which pays workers $614.40 to $996.60 a fortnight
Higher global temperatures may cause coral bleaching. There's just no evidence that man causes higher global temperatures.