The Herald (South Africa)

World on brink of fourth mass coral reef bleaching event, US monitor says

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The world is on the verge of a fourth mass coral bleaching event which could see wide swathes of tropical reefs die, including parts of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion (NOAA) said.

Marine biologists are on high alert after months of record-breaking ocean heat fuelled by climate change and the El Nino climate pattern.

“It’s looking like the entirety of the southern hemisphere is probably going to bleach this year,” ecologist Derek Manzello, the co-ordinator of NOAA’s Coral Reef Watch, said.

“We are sitting on the cusp of the worst bleaching event in the history of the planet.”

Triggered by heat stress, coral bleaching occurs when corals expel the colourful algae living in their tissues. Without these helpful algae, the corals become pale and are vulnerable to starvation and disease.

Coral bleaching can be devastatin­g for the ocean ecosystem, as well as fisheries and tourism-based economies that depend on healthy, colourful reefs to attract scuba divers and snorkeller­s.

The last global mass coral bleaching event ran from 2014 to 2017, during which the Great Barrier Reef lost nearly a third of its corals, and preliminar­y results suggest about 15% of the world’s reefs saw large coral die-offs.

This year is shaping up to be worse as observatio­ns trickle in. After the northern hemisphere summer last year, the Caribbean registered its worst coral bleaching on record.

Now at the end of its summer, “the southern hemisphere is basically bleaching all over the place,” Manzello said.

“The entirety of the Great Barrier Reef is bleaching. We just had reports that American Samoa is bleaching.”

Previous global bleaching occurred in 2010 and 1998.

Coral bleaching is often tied to the naturally occurring El Nino phenomenon which leads to warmer ocean waters.

But the world also just registered its first 12-month period with an average temperatur­e more than 1.5°C above preindustr­ial levels.

Over a longer period of time, a rise of 1.5°C is believed to be the tipping point for mass coral die-offs, with scientists estimating that 90% of the world’s corals could be lost.

For an event to be deemed global, widespread bleaching must occur in three ocean basins — the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian.

Scientists assess sea surface temperatur­e data and satellite imagery to determine whether reef pixels are passing key thresholds of bleaching.

To merit a global mass bleaching event, a certain percentage of reef pixels need to reveal a level of heat stress in each ocean basin. Based on that definition alone, “technicall­y we’re already there” in 2024, Manzello said.

He said NOAA was still waiting for final confirmati­on from Indian Ocean scientists or photograph­s of Indian Ocean reefs to raise the flag for the fourth mass bleaching event.

At Australia’s Great Barrier Reef — which has seen six localised bleaching events since 1998 — scientists are conducting flyovers of the reef to determine the extent of bleaching.

So far, aerial surveys have revealed extensive coral bleaching across the Keppels region and Capricorn-Bunker groups, Australian Institute of Marine Science spokespers­on Joanne Manning said.

“The aerial surveys are continuing as coral bleaching has been reported in all areas of the marine park,” she said, adding they aimed to expand this to in-water coral surveys soon. —

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