Great
reef catastrophe
Half
the Great Barrier Reef's coral has disappeared in the past 27 years
and less than a quarter could be left within a decade unless action
is taken, a landmark study has found.
2
October, 2012
A
long-term investigation of the reef by scientists at Townsville's
Australian Institute of Marine Science found coral had
been wiped out by intense
tropical cyclones, a native species of starfish and coral bleaching.
The big concern going forward is that if nothing else changes than within 20 years the reef could be in a perilous state.
Researchers
warned that while the World Heritage listed reef was a dynamic system
— with coral cover rising and falling over time — if the mass
die-off continued less than 25 per cent would exist in 2022.
"The
big concern going forward is that if nothing else changes than within
20 years the reef could be in a perilous state," said institute
senior scientist Peter Doherty .
At
214 reef sites surveyed, the coral cover halved from 28 to 13.8 per
cent between 1985 and 2012.
Two-thirds
of the loss occurred since 1998. Only three of the 214 reef sites
exhibited no impact.
- "Coral cover is the simplest index of reef health, and the health of the Great Barrier Reef has gone down dramatically," said institute senior scientist Hugh Sweatman.
"The
coral provides shelter and food for thousands of organisms so you
don't just lose the corals themselves you lose the species that
depend on them."
The
coral damage was most pronounced in the central and southern regions
of the 2000-kilometre reef, with the remote northern section
remaining largely unaffected.
Tropical cyclones accounted for 48 per cent of the coral die-off across the entire reef, followed by outbreaks of the crown of thorns starfish, which was responsible for 42 per cent of the loss. Bleaching contributed to 10 per cent of loss.
"You
can dive on a coral reef one week when all you can see is living
coral, each colony overlapping with its neighbours, but after the
passage of a cyclone it looks like a cement road," said Dr
Doherty.
Global
warming models project increases in water temperatures will lead to
more intense cyclones.
Photo:
rtanberg
While
crown of thorns starfish were a natural predator of coral — the
adult animals feed on tiny polyps inside the coral skeleton — their
impact over the past 25 years had been substantial.
A
large outbreak that started around Lizard Island in 1994, spread the
length of the reef over 15 years.
Flood
waters carrying fertilisers and other agricultural nutrients into the
ocean were thought to increase the survival of crown of thorns larvae
because the runoff encouraged the growth of algae eaten by the
offspring.
A
crown of thorns starfish.
"The
frequency of crown of thorns outbreaks on the Great Barrier Reef has
likely increased from one in every 50-80 years before European
agricultural runoff, to the currently observed frequency of one in
about every 15 years," said the authors.
Warmer
waters were also responsible for coral-bleaching events, where the
tiny organisms living inside the coral skeleton "bleached"
and died with the rising temperatures.
"The
recent frequency and intensity of mass coral bleaching are of major
concern, and are directly attributable to rising atmospheric
greenhouse gases," wrote the authors, whose study is published
in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"Bleaching
mortality will almost certainly increase in the GBR, given the upward
trend in temperatures," they said.
While
the state of the world's longest reef system appeared bleak, it did
have the ability to recover.
"What
it needs is a decade or two to do it in," said Dr Sweatman.
"Right
now the cyclones, the crown of thorns and the bleaching events are
coming so thick and fast that they're not getting enough time to
recover."
While
storms and bleaching events could not be controlled in the short
term, direct action on the crown of thorns starfish would offer an
immediate remedy for the reef.
"If
we could stop crown of thorn outbreaks tomorrow then we could get the
coral cover on the reef back to 1985 condition in less than 20
years," said Dr Doherty.
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