"Graveyard Of Corals" In Northern GBR. Scientist: "Probably The Worst I Have Seen In Thirty Years"
Reefs across the north of the Great Barrier Reef have seen substantial losses of coral cover after a summer of extreme heat, two cyclones and major flooding, according to the first results of surveys from government marine scientists. After the most widespread coral bleaching event seen on the worlds biggest reef system, the Australian Institute of Marine Science said one area around Cooktown and Lizard Island had lost more than a third of its live hard coral the biggest annual drop in 39 years of monitoring.
Dr Mike Emslie, leader of Aims long-term monitoring program, described a graveyard of corals off Lizard Island, with Linnet Reef one of the worst-hit. It was pretty sobering, he said. Probably the worst single impact I have seen in 30 years. We saw dead standing coral colonies and the whole scene was a drab brown mess. As far as the eye could see was corals covered in algae.
Aims revealed the results from in-water surveys of 19 reefs between Cairns and Cooktown carried out in recent months, where 12 reefs saw a drop in coral cover of between 11% and 72%. The results are the first official assessment of the impact of last summers mass coral bleaching event, which came during a fourth global event that saw heat stress high enough to bleach more than 70% of the planets corals, affecting reefs in more than 70 countries.
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Coral cover in the Lizard Island-Cooktown section of the reef had fallen from 31% to 19%. Around Cairns, coral cover dropped by a third but reefs around Innisfail were stable. Emslie said: From what we have seen so far, the impact from these events is significant coral mortality in those areas hardest hit, although the level of mortality has been variable, and a few reefs escaped significant loss. He said some coral species appeared to have fared much better than others, and data so far suggested reefs on the outer shelf were much less affected. Most reefs now have moderate levels of coral cover of between 10% and 30%. Emslie said mass coral bleaching events were unheard of before the late 1990s but were now happening every other year on the reef, and this would worsen as global heating continued. The 2024 mass bleaching was the fifth since 2016.
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https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/nov/19/graveyard-of-dead-coral-great-barrier-reef-bleaching-damage