The Washington Post has an article by Chris Mooney about coral losses in Australia:
We knew this was coming.Rico says that, as ever, Nature bats last...
For months, coral reef experts have been loudly, and sometimes mournfully, announcing that much of the treasured Great Barrier Reef has been hit by “severe” coral bleaching, thanks to abnormally warm ocean waters.
Bleaching, though, isn’t the same as coral death. When symbiotic algae leave corals’ bodies and the animals then turn white or “bleach”, they can still bounce back if environmental conditions improve. The Great Barrier Reef has seen major bleaching in some of its sectors, particularly the more isolated northern reef, and the expectation has long been that this event would result in significant coral death, as well.
Now some of the first figures confirming that are coming in. Diving and aerial surveys of reefs by scientists with the ARC Center of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at James Cook University in Australia, the same researchers who recently documented at least some bleaching at over ninety percent of individual reefs, have found that a striking thirty-five percent of corals have died in the northern and central sectors of the reef.
The researchers looked at corals from Townsville, Queensland, to New Guinea and examined two hundred thousand overall, said coral expert Terry Hughes, who led the research. The thirty-five percent, the researchers said, is an “initial estimate” that averages estimates taken from different reef regions.
“It varies hugely from reef to reef and from north to south,” said Hughes, who directs the ARC Center. “It basically ranges from zero to a hundred. In the northern part of the reef, in two dozen of the reefs we sampled, we estimate more than fifty percent mortality.”
Fortunately, the southern sector of the reef was largely spared, thanks to the ocean churning and rainfall caused by Tropical Cyclone Winston, which cooled waters in the area, Hughes said. In this region, to the south of the coastal city of Cairns, mortality was only about five percent.
But while coral death numbers are far lower to the south, “an average of thirty-five percent is quite shocking,” Hughes said. “There’s no other natural phenomenon that can cause that level of coral loss at that kind of scale.” He noted that tropical cyclones, that Americans call hurricanes, also kill corals at landfall, but typically over an area of about fifty miles. In contrast, he says, the swath of damage from the bleaching event was five hundred miles wide. “This coral bleaching is a whole new ballgame,” Hughes said.
The news comes just days after the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, an Australian government agency, similarly noted that “in the far north, above Cooktown, substantial coral mortality has been observed at most surveyed inshore and mid-shelf reefs.”
There has already been widespread attribution of this record bleaching event to human-caused climate change. One recent statistical analysis, for instance, gave extremely low odds that the event would have happened by chance in a stable climate. It was caused by record warm March temperatures in the Coral Sea, more than two degrees Fahrenheit above average.
The bleaching event is the third and worst such strike on the Great Barrier Reef; other major bleaching events occurred in 1998 and 2002. “So the question now is, when are we going to get the fourth and fifth bleaching event, and will there be enough time, now that we have lost a third of the corals, for them to recover before the fourth and fifth event?” Hughes said.
In the case of at least some of the corals, the answer is probably no. Some dead corals were fifty or a hundred years old, making it hard to see how these kinds of animals could grow back before another shock to the system arrives.
Indeed, the aforementioned statistical analysis suggested that, by the year 2034, a March with sea temperatures as warm as in 2016 could happen every other year, as the planet continues to warm.
What is happening to the Great Barrier Reef this year is just one part of a much broader global episode. “Unfortunately, there are islands in the central equatorial Pacific, like Christmas Island, where the effects have been even more catastrophic, with over eighty percent mortality,” said Mark Eakin, who coordinates the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Coral Reef Watch. “It is essential to remember that even those corals still alive have a higher risk of dying from disease and have lost at least a year’s reproductive season and growth,” Eakin continued. “Even the corals that ‘only’ bleach are severely harmed by events like this one.”
The damage to the Great Barrier Reef, a major tourist attraction, has led to intense climate-focused debate in Australia, which is on the verge of an election on 2 July 2016.
But, for scientists, the idea that something abnormal is happening seems hard to escape. “We seem to have gone from an era when mass bleaching was unheard of to the modern era, where it has now occurred three times in eighteen years,” Hughes said.
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