The Independent

Great Barrier Reef ‘has lost half its corals since 1995’

- HARRY COCKBURN

The vibrant corals which once made up Australia’s Great Barrier Reef are dying so quickly due to the climate crisis that more than 50 per cent have died over the last 25 years, a new assessment has found.

A research team examined coral communitie­s and their colony size along the length of the Great Barrier Reef between 1995 and 2017.

They found declines across small, medium and large corals, in both deep and shallow water, across “virtually all species”.

The reef – a Unesco World Heritage site – was particular­ly badly hit by two years of record-breaking temperatur­es which caused mass coral bleaching in 2016 and 2017.

Approximat­ely one-third of the world’s coral reefs were estimated to have been affected by bleaching in 2016, according to separate studies.

That year, on the Great Barrier Reef, less than 10 per cent of corals escaped with no bleaching, compared with more than 40 per cent in previous bleaching events. Severe bleaching also occurred the following year.

Coral bleaching occurs when conditions such as overheatin­g or too much light cause the corals to be put under stress. As a result, they expel the symbiotic algae living in their pores. This turns the coral completely white. This doesn’t necessaril­y kill the corals, which can recover over long periods of time, but it does leave them much more vulnerable.

Lead author of the new research, Dr Andy Dietzel, from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at James Cook University in Queensland (CoralCoE), said there is a lack in long-term history detailing the changes in coral population­s.

“We measured changes in colony sizes because population studies are important for understand­ing demography and the corals’ capacity to breed,” he said.

He and his co-authors’ work showed a depletion of coral population­s, and earlier this year, a further coralbleac­hing event occurred on the reef.

“We found the number of small, medium and large corals on the Great Barrier Reef has declined by more than 50 per cent since the 1990s,’ said co-author Professor Terry Hughes, also from CoralCoE.

“The decline occurred in both shallow and deeper water, and across virtually all species – but especially in branching and table-shaped corals. These were the worst affected by record-breaking temperatur­es that triggered mass bleaching in 2016 and 2017,” Professor Hughes said.

The branching and table-shaped corals provide the structures important for reef inhabitant­s such as fish. The loss of these corals means a loss of habitat, which in turn diminishes fish abundance and the productivi­ty of coral reef fisheries.

Dr Dietzel said one of the major implicatio­ns of coral size is its effect on survival and breeding.

“A vibrant coral population has millions of small, baby corals, as well as many large ones – the big mamas who produce most of the larvae,” he said.

“Our results show the ability of the Great Barrier Reef to recover – its resilience – is compromise­d compared to the past, because there are fewer babies, and fewer large breeding adults.”

The authors of the study say better data on the demographi­c trends of corals is urgently needed.

“If we want to understand how coral population­s are changing and whether or not they can recover between disturbanc­es, we need more detailed demographi­c data: on recruitmen­t, on reproducti­on and on colony size structure,” Dr Dietzel said.

“We used to think the Great Barrier Reef is protected by its sheer size, but our results show that even the world’s largest and relatively well-protected reef system is increasing­ly compromise­d and in decline,” Professor Hughes said.

The authors said the climate crisis is driving an increase in the frequency of reef disturbanc­es such as marine heatwaves.

The study records steeper deteriorat­ions of coral colonies in the northern and central Great Barrier Reef after the mass coral bleaching events in 2016 and 2017. And the southern part of the reef was also exposed

to record-breaking temperatur­es in early 2020.

“There is no time to lose – we must sharply decrease greenhouse gas emissions asap,” the authors said. Despite the evidence of global climate breakdown, Australia’s president Scott Morrison has pledged a “gasled recovery” following the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Last month he said there was “no credible energy transition plan for an economy like Australia that does not involve the greater use of gas”.

The study is published in the journal Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B.

 ?? (Getty) ?? The once brightly hued coral has turned a pale grey due to bleaching
(Getty) The once brightly hued coral has turned a pale grey due to bleaching

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