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Monday, 20 February 2017
Images of new bleaching on Great Barrier Reef heighten fears of coral death
Exclusive: Coral bleaching found near Palm Island as
unusually warm waters are expected off eastern Australia, with areas
hit in last year’s event in mortal danger
Newly bleached corals discovered near Palm Island on the Great Barrier Reef.
Photograph: Australian Marine Conservation Society
Elle Hunt
The embattled Great Barrier Reef could face yet more severe coral bleaching in the coming month, with areas badly hit by last year’s event at risk of death.
Images taken by local divers last week and shared exclusively with
the Guardian by the Australian Marine Conservation Society show newly
bleached corals discovered near Palm Island.
Most of the Great Barrier Reef has been placed on red alert for coral
bleaching for the coming month by the US National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Its satellite thermal maps have projected
unusually warm waters off eastern Australia after an extreme heatwave
just over a week ago saw land temperatures reach above 47C in parts of
the country.
According to the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, sea
surface temperatures from Cape Tribulation to Townsville have been up to
2C higher than normal for the time of year for more than a month.
Newly bleached coral. Most of the reef has been placed on
red alert for coral bleaching for the coming month by the US National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Photograph: Australian Marine
Conservation Society
The NOAA Coral Reef Watch’s forecast for the next four weeks has
placed an even higher level alert on parts of the far northern, northern
and central reef, indicating mortality is likely.
Corals south of Cairns, in the Whitsundays and parts of the far
northern reef that were badly hit by last year’s mass bleaching event
are at fatal risk.
Imogen Zethoven, the Great Barrier Reef’s campaign director for the
AMCS, said the projections for the next four weeks, plus evidence of new
coral bleaching, were “extremely concerning”.
The bleaching that occurred over eight to nine months of last year
was the worst-ever on record for the Great Barrier Reef, with as much as
85% of coral between Cape York and Lizard Island dying. Twenty-two per
cent of corals over the entire reef are dead.
Zethoven pointed to projections by NOAA that severe bleaching of the
Great Barrier Reef would occur annually by 2043 if nothing was done to
reduce emissions.
“The reef will be gone before annual severe bleaching,” she said. “It won’t survive even biannual bleaching.”
The $1bn reef fund announced
by the prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull, in June last year was a
“cynical rebadging exercise” undercut by its support for fossil fuel
initiatives such as Adani’s Carmicheal coalmine “that will spell
catastrophe for the reef”, Zethoven said.
“There’s no doubt about that anymore,” she said. “They know what they
are doing and they should come clean with the Australian public that
they have no interest in the long-term survival of the Great Barrier
Reef.
“To the average person on the street, that’s what it looks like. And
if the government thinks that’s not the case, they’re out of touch.”
In December last year the government’s Northern Australia Infrastructure Fund granted Adani “conditional approval”
to $1bn loan for its Carmicheal coalmine and rail project in central
Queensland, which could produce 60m tons of coal annually for 60 years.
Warmer ocean temperatures brought about by climate change is a key factor in coral bleaching. Polling suggests that more than two-thirds of Australians believe the reef’s condition should be declared a national emergency.
Zethoven said the government had made “a very deliberate decision to
go down the coal road”, despite it jeopardising the reef’s future
prospects as well as the 70,000 jobs in regional Queensland that depend on it.
John Rumney, a diving operator based in Port Douglas, said the
“commercial advantage” to saving the reef went beyond jobs. Much of
coastal Queensland was “majorly invested” in reef tourism, he said.
According to the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park
Authority, sea surface temperatures from Cape Tribulation to Townsville
have been up to 2C higher than normal for the time of year. Photograph:
Australian Marine Conservation Society
The federal government’s measures to save the reef were hypocrisy and
lip service, he said, when it was simultaneously “actively supporting
the cause of the cancer – the worst cause”.
“It’s immoral that those of us who are making our living from a
healthy environment are paying taxes to subsidise infrastructure that’s
going to cause climate change in a major way for the next 50 years,” he
said. “If this all goes ahead, we’re basically dooming our tourism
industry.”
Rumney said he had seen new and extensive bleaching of corals from Cairns to Townsville.
“There are definite large areas of mortality. It’s just the next
depressing moment. Before, the reef has bleached and recovered but now
we’re talking about how often is it bleaching and what percentage is
left.”
Areas that suffered in last year’s event were now less resilient and there seemed to be less coral strong enough to spawn.
Climate change-induced mass bleaching increasingly resembled a catastrophe the reef would be unable to recover from, he said.
“It’s weaker, just like humans,” Rumney said. “If you’re already down
and out with a cold or cancer, you’re less resilient – the next thing
that comes along is going to knock you back more.
“It’s the continual onslaught that will eventually kill the reef.”
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