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Earth Australia Science

Great Barrier Reef Suffers Its Most Widespread Mass Bleaching Event On Record (washingtonpost.com) 46

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Washington Post: Surveys conducted by scientists at Australia's James Cook University and the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority show that a summer of extreme heat has caused the reef, which is a World Heritage Site, to suffer a mass bleaching of unprecedented scale. Corals from the far north to the southern tip of the 1,400 mile-long ecosystem are experiencing severe impacts. It was also one of the reef's worst mass bleaching episodes in terms of intensity, second only to 2016, which killed half of all shallow-water corals on the northern Great Barrier Reef. Unlike the summer of 2016, when an intense marine heat wave coincided with one of the strongest El Nino events on record, this past summer brought a bleaching event without any assistance from the Pacific climate oscillation.

As heat built across the reef in February, the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority began reporting pockets of bleaching in the far north toward the end of the month. By early March, vast swaths of the ecosystem had accumulated eight or more "degree heating weeks," a metric scientists use to describe recent cumulative heat exposure. At this threshold, reef scientists expect to see widespread bleaching and mortality from thermal stress, according to NOAA. Researchers decided to conduct aerial and waterborne surveys to assess the extent of the damage. The surveys, which took place during the last two weeks of March, quickly confirmed the reef has undergone its third mass bleaching event in the past five years.
"This year, some 35 percent of the 1,036 reefs the scientists surveyed experienced moderate bleaching, while a quarter were severely bleached," the report adds. "Scientists saw severe bleaching on coastal reefs from Torres Strait in the far north to the southern border of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park, at levels only eclipsed during 2016."

What's troubling to see is bleaching in the south, which has managed to escape the previous two events. "In the northern and central Great Barrier Reef, these corals were largely annihilated by bleaching in 2016-17, transforming vast swaths of the reef into a 'highly altered, degraded system,'" reports The Washington Post, citing a 2018 paper in the journal Nature. "Now the south seems poised to slide into a similar ecological disrepair."
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Great Barrier Reef Suffers Its Most Widespread Mass Bleaching Event On Record

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  • by robbyyy ( 703254 ) on Monday April 06, 2020 @11:58PM (#59915922) Homepage
    I have visited the region on countless occasions over the last decade, staying on various islands on the reef, in Port Douglas and Cairns. Its a complicated subject matter locally. Some say that it is struggling. Others, especially those reliant upon the reef for a living say that its better than it used to be and criticise the surveys as being based on flyovers from too high up. However, visually, to my mind we do seem to be seeing more damage, at least around the cities and shipping lanes, compared to my first visits. We now don't visit the reef itself. Lots of other things to do in Far North Queensland. Great weather too (most of the time).
  • by theheadlessrabbit ( 1022587 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2020 @12:09AM (#59915930) Homepage Journal

    These are troubling times with a lot of bad news out there, so let's try to be optimistic about this, and find the bright side.
    Sure, this might be the worst shape the reef has been in for all of recorded history, but it's also the best shape the reef will be in for the rest of recorded history.

    • Could the reef be reinforced by towing all the cruise ships to the area to be sunk? Burned to the waterline first. And after reimbursing the cruise ship lines so they can reimburse sick customers with the money, of course.

  • Yet another story about global warming where no solutions are offered. Here's an idea, let's make a list. We'll list all the energy sources we have available to us then rate them on vital metrics. Metrics like CO2 emissions, safety, cost, abundance, labor needs, raw material needs, and land area requirements. This isn't that hard to do, it should only take a few minutes of searching the internet to find at least good order of magnitude numbers. Here's what you will find at the top of this list, separat

    • by barakn ( 641218 )

      If nuclear power plants are so great, we'll let you fund one and then you can have all the profit that results from it.

      • If you had government approval to build one, funding would be easy to secure.

      • If nuclear power plants are so great, we'll let you fund one and then you can have all the profit that results from it.

        There's people standing in line waiting for the federal government to issue licenses to build. Some of them have been there for 40 years.

        The only thing holding back new nuclear power right now in the USA is the federal government. I suspect that one good way for the government to get a lot of people to work in short order is to issue permits for nuclear power. This doesn't mean taking shortcuts on safety. This doesn't mean handing out government money. All this means is to give investors the confidence

        • by barakn ( 641218 )

          There's people standing in line waiting for the federal government to issue licenses to build. Some of them have been there for 40 years.

          It turns out they're also standing in line waiting for the federal government to hand them money. Nuclear power plants are heavily government-subsidized and are never actually profitable. https://www.diw.de/de/diw_01.c... [www.diw.de]

          • It turns out they're also standing in line waiting for the federal government to hand them money. Nuclear power plants are heavily government-subsidized and are never actually profitable. https://www.diw.de/de/diw_01.c [www.diw.de]...

            The 1980s called, they want their anti-nuclear bullshit back. Let's take a few points from the abstract.

            The findings show that nuclear energy can by no means be called âoecleanâ due to radioactive emissions, which will endanger humans and the natural environment for over one million years.

            An isotope that is radioactive for over a million years is not a radiation hazard. The candle that burns twice as bright burns half as long. Depleted uranium is radioactive, it's primary constituent element is uranium-238. What is the half life of U-238? Over four billion years. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
            What do people use depleted uranium for? Well, for one it's used as protection against r

  • All that summary and it doesn't explain what bleaching is. I can make an educated guess, but are they whiter?
    • by Xest ( 935314 )

      The zooxanthella on which corals depend to survive, and which also help give corals their colour leave when coral becomes sick (such as from being too hot). That makes them go white and unable to feed, sometimes the zooxanthella returns, but more often it doesn't and they just die. All you're left with are white coral skeletons that eventually get overwhelmed by algae growth which typically prevents new coral from establishing.

      This isn't necessarily permanently fatal to a reef, if you have healthy parrotfis

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