Santa Fe New Mexican

Great Barrier damage irreversib­le

Scientists says global warming wrecking reef

- By Jacqueline Williams

SYDNEY — An underwater heat wave that damaged huge sections of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef two years ago spurred a die-off of coral so severe that scientists say the natural wonder will never look the same again.

Scientists said nearly onethird of the reef ’s coral were killed when ocean temperatur­es spiked in 2016, a result of global warming, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal Nature.

The damage to the reef, one of the world’s largest living structures, has also radically altered the mix of its coral species, scientists said.

“The reef is changing faster than anyone thought it would,” said Terry P. Hughes, lead author of the study and director of a government-funded center for coral reef studies at James Cook University in Queensland.

“One thing we can be sure about is the reef isn’t going to look the same again,” Hughes said.

The reef is home to thousands of species, including sharks, turtles and whales. Australia relies on it for about 70,000 jobs and billions of dollars annually in tourism revenue, all now threatened by years of accumulate­d damage.

The study’s authors estimated how much coral had died in the immediate aftermath of the 2016 heat wave and then returned nine months later to discern how many corals had regained

their color — a sign of restored health — and how many had died. Their report describes a catastroph­ic die-off on the northern part of the reef, affecting the mix of coral species.

Hughes said scientists had predicted a mass die-off resulting from global warming, but “what the paper shows is that it’s well underway.” He added, “That transition is happening here and now.”

Corals require warm water to thrive, but they are extremely sensitive to heat, and an increase of 2 or 3 degrees Fahrenheit above normal can kill them.

Scientists said that if nations honored global commitment­s in the Paris climate accord aimed at preventing temperatur­es from rising more than 2 degrees Celsius, Australia would still have the Great Barrier Reef in 50 years.

It would still look very different from today.

But if greenhouse gas emissions continue on their current trajectory, the reef will be unrecogniz­able, they said.

“We’re in unchartere­d territory,” Hughes said. “Where we end up depends completely on how well or how badly we deal

with climate change.”

The Great Barrier Reef has bleached four times since 1998, according to scientists. Record high temperatur­es in 2016 were followed by another bleaching event last year.

“We’re now at a point where we’ve lost close to half of the corals in shallow-water habitats across the northern two-thirds of the Great Barrier Reef due to back-to-back bleaching over two consecutiv­e years,” said Sean Connolly, also with the center for coral reef studies at James Cook University.

 ?? DAVID MAURICE SMITH/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Scientists collect coral samples from the Great Barrier Reef off Queensland, Australia. Australian Institute of Marine Science researcher­s are studying what few corals that clung to life amid a recent die-off.
DAVID MAURICE SMITH/THE NEW YORK TIMES Scientists collect coral samples from the Great Barrier Reef off Queensland, Australia. Australian Institute of Marine Science researcher­s are studying what few corals that clung to life amid a recent die-off.

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