The Citizen (KZN)

Save the Great Barrier Reef

R19M FOR ANYONE WITH IDEAS TO PROTECT WORLD’S LARGEST LIVING STRUCTURE The 2 300km site is reeling from coral bleaching due to warming sea temperatur­es linked to climate change.

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Australia is calling on the world’s top scientific minds to help save the Great Barrier Reef, offering hundreds of thousands of dollars to fund research into protecting the world’s largest living structure.

The Unesco World Heritage-listed reef is reeling from significan­t coral bleaching due to warming sea temperatur­es linked to climate change.

The 2 300km site is also under pressure from farming runoff, developmen­t and predatory crownof-thorns starfish, with experts warning it could be suffering irreparabl­e damage.

Yesterday, the Australian government announced a A$2 million (R19 million) funding pot available to people with bright ideas on how to save the reef.

“The scale of the problem is big and big thinking is needed, but it’s important to remember that solutions can come from anywhere,” said Environmen­t Minister Josh Frydenberg.

The money would be available to the world’s “greatest scientific minds, industry and business leaders, innovators and entreprene­urs”, he said, adding: “Solutions could focus on anything from reducing the exposure of corals to physical stressors, to boosting coral regenerati­on rates by cultivatin­g reef-building coral larvae that attract other important marine species.”

A$250 000 is available for an initial feasibilit­y stage, where researcher­s can test the technical and commercial viability of their proposals for up to six months.

More than one proposal is expected to be accepted.

A$1 million will then be made available to the best solutions at the proof of concept stage, where applicants develop and test prototypes for up to 12 months. Those that are successful will retain intellectu­al dented occurrence that scientists said would give the invertebra­te marine creatures insufficie­nt time to fully recover.

Coral reefs make up less than 1% of the Earth’s marine environmen­t, but are home to an estimated 25% of ocean life, acting as nurseries for many species of fish. – AFP

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