Daily Dispatch

Great Barrier Reef status lowered to critical, deteriorat­ing

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The health of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, the world’s most extensive and spectacula­r coral reef ecosystem, is in a critical state and deteriorat­ing as climate change warms up the waters in which it lies, an internatio­nal conservati­on group said.

The World Heritage-listed site off Australia’s northeaste­rn coast has lost more than half its coral in the past three decades.

Coral-bleaching in 2016, 2017 and 2020 has further damaged it health and affected its animal, bird and marine population, the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature said in a report.

Such bleaching occurs when hotter water destroys the algae which the coral feeds on, causing it to turn white.

The union moved the reef ’ s status to critical and deteriorat­ing on its watch list.

Some activities which threaten it, like fishing and coastal developmen­t, can be tackled by the management authoritie­s, the union said.

“Other pressures cannot be addressed at the site level, such as climate change, which is recognised as the greatest threat,” it said.

Progress towards safeguardi­ng the reef under a long-term sustainabi­lity plan through to 2050 has been slow and it has not been possible to stop its deteriorat­ion, it said.

The turtle population­s — including loggerhead, hawksbill and northern green — as well as the scalloped hammerhead shark, many seabird population­s and possibly some dolphin species are declining.

Efforts to safeguard the reef are rising, however. HSBC and the Queensland government said in October they would buy “Reef Credits , a tradable unit that quantifies and values the work undertaken to improve water quality”flowing onto the reef.

Similar to the carbon offset market which incentivis­es the reduction of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, the scheme pays landholder­s for improved water quality. —

 ?? Picture: 123RF ?? WARMING WATERS: Bleached coral in the Pacific Ocean.
Picture: 123RF WARMING WATERS: Bleached coral in the Pacific Ocean.

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