Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Great Barrier Reef Showing ‘Signs Of Recovery’

- By COLIN BERTRAM Bloomberg

Following dire warnings of reef die-off after massive coral bleaching in 2016 and 2017, Tourism and Events Queensland has issued a “positive update” on the status of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, reporting that some affected areas are showing “substantia­l signs of recovery.”

The nonprofit Reef & Rainforest Research Centre has reported signs of recovery due to a milder 2017-18 summer, as well as cooperatio­n among science, industry, and government in supporting the reef ’s recovery, according to the report issued on Wednesday by the Queensland State Government.

Stretching more than 1,430 miles along Queensland’s spectacula­r coastline, the Great Barrier Reef is the longest coral reef in the world and the first coral reef ecosystem to be awarded Unesco World Heritage Status.

Coral bleaching occurs when coral experience­s stress from heightened water temperatur­es or poor water quality. In response, the coral ejects a photosynth­etic algae called zooxanthel­lae, which removes the coral’s distinctiv­e color. If the stress conditions persist, the coral will die, the report says, but if conditions return to acceptable levels, some coral can reabsorb the substance and recover.

The RRRC, in cooperatio­n with the Associatio­n of Marine Park Tourism Operators, conducted detailed surveys at key tourism dive sites around the city of Cairns in 2016 and 2017 and says certain reefs that were strongly affected in the bleaching event are showing significan­t signs of improvemen­t.

Coral bleaching occurs in multiple stages, according to RRRC Managing Director Sheriden Morris, ranging from the equivalent of a mild sunburn to coral mortality.

“When a reef is reported as ‘bleached’ in the media, that often leaves out a critical detail on how severe that bleaching is, at what depth the bleaching has occurred and if it’s going to cause permanent damage to the coral at that site,” Morris said in the statement, adding that the Barrier Reef “has significan­t capacity to recover from health impacts like bleaching events.”

Reports that the entire reef is dead due to severe bleaching are “blatantly untrue,” Morris said. Still, he warns that the recovery is “contingent on environmen­tal conditions” and that the reef “may suffer further bleaching events as the climate continues to warm.”

The full impact of the 2016 bleaching, which damaged or destroyed 30 percent of the reef ’s shallow water coral, has not yet fully been assessed, according to a report released on Tuesday by the Nature Research Journal.

Deeper reefs are often considered a refuge from thermal anomalies such as those experience­d in 2016 and 2017, but the report argues that both shallow and deep reefs are threatened by mass bleaching events; even when the upwelling of colder water (which replaces warmer water pushed offshore by winds) stopped at the end of summer, temperatur­es at depth rose to record-high levels. Researcher­s found bleached coral colonies as far down as 131 feet beneath the ocean’s surface, according to the report.

News of the recovery comes only two months after the RRRC co-hosted the Great Barrier Reef Restoratio­n Symposium in Cairns, which convened more than 300 scientists, engineers, and marine tourism representa­tives from 14 countries to focus on the restoratio­n and recovery of coral reef systems under threat from warming climates.

In April, the Australian Federal Government announced a $379 million (A$500 million) funding grant for the Great Barrier Reef in order to tackle challenges such as climate change, coral-eating starfish, and water quality affected by agricultur­al runoff.

Deloitte Access Economics valued the reef at A$56 billion in 2017, basing it on the fact that the reef supports tens of thousands of jobs and contribute­s A$6.4 billion annually to Australia’s economy.

 ?? HANDOUT ?? THE NONPROFIT Reef & Rainforest Research Centre has reported signs of recovery due to a milder summer, as well as cooperatio­n among science, industry and government.
HANDOUT THE NONPROFIT Reef & Rainforest Research Centre has reported signs of recovery due to a milder summer, as well as cooperatio­n among science, industry and government.

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