The Asian Age

Cold water devastates coral reefs off Japan, finds survey

- — AFP

Tokyo: Unusually cold water has devastated some of the world’s most northerly coral reefs, which lie off the coast of western Japan, an environmen­t ministry official said on Wednesday. The ministry surveyed the reefs in recent months and found widespread bleaching, with between 90 to 100 per cent of each of the six spots surveyed affected. In four of the surveyed areas, researcher­s have reported between 85 percent and 95 percent of the bleached areas were now dead, said Yuto Takahashi, a ranger at the regional ministry office that conducted the survey. The devastatio­n is thought to be the result of unusually cold water temperatur­es in the area this year, partly produced by the meandering of the Kuroshio current, he told AFP. “Very strong cold fronts of the winter contribute­d to the low water temperatur­e,” he said. “The meandering of the Kuroshio current is also known to have lowered water temperatur­es” off Wakayama and other areas along the Pacific coast, he added. The Kuroshio is a warm current in the northweste­rn Pacific Ocean, and its unusual movement away from the area brought up cold water from the depths. Little is known about exactly why the Kuroshio current changes its flows, but scientists have observed the meandering phenomenon six times since 1965, most recently last summer. The phenomenon results in lower water temperatur­es, changes the locations of fishing grounds and even affects ship navigation, according to the Japan Meteorolog­ical Agency. Coral bleaching and death is irreversib­le, but differs from similar events seen in other more southerly reefs. “This is different from coral bleaching in the Great Barrier Reef or Okinawa, which is caused by unusual warming of water temperatur­es,” Mr Takahashi said. “Water in our region is cold, which makes the corals very vulnerable.” Ironically, the warming water that is bleaching corals further south could create a more stable environmen­t for corals in northern areas. Campaigner­s have warned that environmen­tal changes including warming water and pollution are causing significan­t bleaching of corals around the world. Corals make up less than one percent of Earth’s marine environmen­t, but are home to more than 25 per cent of marine life.

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