Iran Daily

Save world’s largest coral reef?

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Like other coral reefs around the world, Australia’s Great Barrier Reef is facing big threats from climate change — such as warmer and more acidic seawater and increased ultraviole­t (UV) radiation from the Sun.

Last year, experts said large sections of the reef were essentiall­y dead, bleached into oblivion, nbcnews.com reported.

But scientists Down Under have come up with a sunscreen of sorts that they say could help protect the reef during heat waves.

It’s an ultra-thin layer of calcium carbonate — the same material naturally found in coral skeletons — that could be applied to the water’s surface above the reef.

Dr. David Solomon, a professor of chemical and biomolecul­ar engineerin­g at the University of Melbourne and a senior advisor to the team of scientists who came up with the idea, said, “Our aim is to give the coral time to adjust to the changed conditions of high temperatur­e and doses of UV light so that the coral forms different chemical structures that can survive.”

The biodegrada­ble screen would be sprayed onto the water’s surface, where it would form a layer just one molecule thick, or 50,000 times thinner than a human hair.

Recent tests suggest that the thin film would reflect up to 30 percent of UV light falling upon the water’s surface, helping keep the water at just the right temperatur­e for the reef below.

Because the screen is so thin, it doesn’t prevent birds or fish from passing through, and can even reform after the water settles.

Anna Marsden, managing director of the Great Barrier Reef Foundation, a charity dedicated to protecting the reef, said, “The initial testing showed there were no adverse impacts on corals during the small-scale trial.”

The Great Barrier Reef covers more than 130,000 square miles along Australia’s northeast coast, so it’s not feasible to apply the screen across the reef’s entire expanse.

Dr. Terry Hughes, director of the Arc Center of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at James Cook University in Townsville, Australia, said, “Shading with a sunshield would only be feasible for tiny areas, assuming the chemical doesn’t drift away or break up.”

James Cook University is a research partner with the Great Barrier Reef Foundation, but Hughes wasn’t among the scientists working on the project.

The researcher­s hope the screen can be applied to the reef’s most vulnerable sections of coral.

Marsden said, “For example, it could be to help protect important tourism sites or specific areas that are of high conservati­on value that are under stress at particular times.”

The Great Barrier Reef was designated as a World Heritage Site in 1981.

 ??  ?? nbcnews.com The coral under high temperatur­e and UV light.
nbcnews.com The coral under high temperatur­e and UV light.

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