Iran Daily

49% of Japan’s largest coral reef has bleached

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Some 49.9 percent of Sekisei coral reef Japan’s largest — had bleached by the end of 2017, the Environmen­t Ministry has revealed.

The figure is substantia­lly less than the bleaching ratio of 91.4 percent on the reef between Okinawa Prefecture’s Ishigaki and Iriomote islands at the end of 2016. However, “the water temperatur­e remains high and the bleaching ratio is still high. We can’t be optimistic”, said an Environmen­t Ministry official. “Coral in the area hasn’t shown signs of real recovery, and remains in critical condition.”

According to mainichi.jp, bleaching occurs when water temperatur­es rise above a certain level, causing coral polyps to expel zooxanthel­lae, a kind of algae that lives in their tissues. Experts say coral bleaching tends to occur when the water temperatur­e is above 30°C.

Since large-scale coral bleaching was observed in the Sekisei lagoon in summer 2016, the Environmen­t Ministry has conducted a survey on the reef several times a year.

As the sea temperatur­e around the lagoon often fell below 30°C in summer 2017, the latest survey found only 0.1 percent of coral in the area had died as a result of bleaching, significan­tly below the 70.1 percent from a year earlier. Moreover, healthy coral covered 14.7 percent of the total area of the reef inhabitabl­e by the invertebra­te, slightly above the 11.6 percent of a year earlier.

A nationwide Environmen­t Ministry survey conducted last year shows that about 30 percent of the coral off Okinawa and the Amami islands in Kagoshima Prefecture had bleached — up more than 10 points from 2016 — as a result of rising water temperatur­es.

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mainichi.jp

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