The Borneo Post

Australia’s Great Barrier Reef struggles to survive

- Laura Chung

LIZARD ISLAND, Australia: Australia’s famed Great Barrier Reef is suffering one of the most severe coral bleaching events on record, leaving scientists fearful for its survival as the impact of climate change worsens.

For 33 years marine biologist Anne Hoggett has lived and worked on Lizard Island, a small slice of tropical paradise off Australia’s northeast tip.

She affectiona­lly dubs it ‘Blizzard Island’. The only relief from the wind and teeming showers is in the powder blue waters, where sea turtles and tiger sharks rove along the Great Barrier Reef.

As Hoggett snorkels, schools of fish swim gracefully, feeding on the coral or darting between it. Some are as small as her little finger, others the colour of fire.

But thanks to climate change, it is becoming a watery graveyard of bleached reef.

“We don’t know yet if they’ve already sustained too much damage to recover or not,” said Hoggett.

The world is currently experienci­ng its second major coral bleaching event in 10 years, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion (NOAA) announced Monday.

Coral bleaching occurs when water temperatur­es rise more than one degree Celsius (33.8 degrees Fahrenheit).

“As the world’s oceans continue to warm, coral bleaching is becoming more frequent and severe,” said NOAA’s Derek Manzello.

In a bid to survive, the coral expels microscopi­c algae, known as zooxanthel­lae, which it needs to live.

If high temperatur­es persist, the coral eventually evicts most of the zooxanthel­lae, turns white, and dies. Since February, ocean temperatur­es around Lizard Island have been up to two degrees Celsius warmer than the average.

Hoggett estimates about 80 per cent of the coral is already dead.

‘Just about everything died’

Often dubbed the world’s largest living structure, the Great Barrier Reef is a 2,300kilomet­re long expanse housing a stunning array of biodiversi­ty, including more than 600 types of coral and 1,625 fish species.

It is vital to the health of the ocean and Australia’s tourism industry, netting billions of dollars every year.

But repeated mass bleaching events have robbed the reef of its wonder, turning banks of once-vibrant corals to a sickly ashen white.

In March, Australian reef authoritie­s announced another mass bleaching event was underway, the fifth in eight years.

Through aerial monitoring, they found more than 600 reefs have experience­d bleaching.

Ten per cent of the area is classed as suffering extreme bleaching, when more than 90 per cent of corals are distressed and unlikely to survive.

Just nine weeks ago, the reef off Lizard Island was healthy and vibrant, Hoggett said.

Now, she points to the fluorescen­t pink and blue coral.

Despite its initial beauty, that means the coral is highly stressed and expelling the healthy algae it needs to survive.

Elsewhere, white coral is covered in a fluffy, brown algae – a sign it is dead.

When Hoggett first arrived on the island three decades ago, bleaching would occur every 10 years or so.

Now, it is happening every year. Mass bleaching events along the reef occurred in 1998, 2002, 2016, 2017, 2020, 2022 and now 2024.

She is heartbroke­n.

“The only time we’ve seen bleaching this bad was in 2016, when just about everything died. It’s anybody’s guess as to how many of these corals that are still alive now will be able to survive and recover,” Hoggett told AFP.

‘Too small in scale’

While reefs can recover from bleaching, the window of recovery between events is narrowing.

As the planet continues to warm, bleaching is forecast to reduce global coral cover by 95 per cent if temperatur­es warm by about two degrees.

If the rise is up to 1.5 degrees above pre-industrial levels, bleaching will spread to 70 per cent.

Even if all countries deliver on their climate commitment­s, the world would still be on track for two degrees or more of warming.

Globally, billions of dollars are being poured into coral bleaching mitigation projects – including breeding coral on artificial reefs and translocat­ing it, making clouds more heat reflective, or controllin­g coral predators.

These site-specific conservati­on efforts are important, but Terry Hughes, one of Australia’s foremost coral reef scientists, says they do nothing to address the root cause of bleaching: climate change.

“After 50 years of interventi­ons, coral restoratio­n attempts have not changed the ecology of a single reef anywhere. They’re just too small in scale,” Hughes said.

For example, Hughes says breeding corals in aquariums has strict limitation­s.

“You would need 250 million large corals, each the size of a dinner plate, to increase coral cover in the Great Barrier Reef by just one per cent – and it would cost billions of dollars,” he added.

“The solution is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions as quickly as possible.”

‘Not giving up’

Australia has invested about Aus$5 billion (US$3.2 billion) into improving water quality, reducing the effects of climate change, and protecting threatened species.

The country is one of the world’s largest gas and coal exporters, and has only recently set loose targets to become carbon neutral.

 ?? — AFP photos ?? This aerial photo shows a boat anchored near coral around Lizard Island on the Great Barrier Reef.
— AFP photos This aerial photo shows a boat anchored near coral around Lizard Island on the Great Barrier Reef.
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 ?? ?? Tourists snorkellin­g above bleached and dead coral around Lizard Island.
Tourists snorkellin­g above bleached and dead coral around Lizard Island.
 ?? ?? A green turtle feeding on sea grass at Lizard Island.
A green turtle feeding on sea grass at Lizard Island.
 ?? ?? A woman standing on a beach on Lizard Island.
A woman standing on a beach on Lizard Island.

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