The Great Barrier Reef likely just experienced its most widespread bleaching event on record

(CNN)Australia’s Great Barrier Reef has likely experienced its most widespread bleaching event on record, according to a US government scientist who monitors the world’s coral reefs.

This marks the third mass bleaching event on the reef in just the last five years.
Climate change could kill all of Earth’s coral reefs by 2100, scientists warn
And scientists say that the rapid warming of the planet due to human emissions of heat-trapping gases are to blame.
On the heels of severe bleaching events in 2016 and 2017 that left half of the coral on the Great Barrier Reef dead, scientists fear this one could be a devastating blow.
“If we do not deal with climate change quickly … we are going to continue to see more severe and more frequent bleaching, and we are going to see the loss of coral reefs in much of the world,” said Dr. C. Mark Eakin, coordinator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) Coral Reef Watch.
The mass bleaching conditions were observed by Coral Reef Watch, which uses remote sensing and modeling to predict and monitor for signs of bleaching.

A file photo taken in October 2016 shows coral bleaching on the Great Barrier Reef in Australia. Scientists say that another mass bleaching event has occurred in 2020.

Eakin says that the bleaching in 2016 and 2017 was extremely intense, but severe damage was concentrated in a few hotspots in the northern and central parts of the reef.
Early indications show that this latest event was not as damaging, but that a much larger area of reef experienced at least some bleaching.
Past bleaching events have typically occurred in years with a strong El Niño-Southern Oscillation, a climate phenomena that can increase the odds of a host of extreme weather events around the globe.
El Niño is characterized by warmer waters in the Pacific ocean, which makes bleaching events in the region more likely. But there is no El Niño currently, which Eakin says makes this bleaching that much more surprising — and frightening.
“The upper ocean has absorbed a tremendous amount of heat in recent years, and it has really put coral reefs around the globe much closer to their upper thermal limits.”

Why the Great Barrier Reef is so critical

Coral reefs are some of the most vibrant marine ecosystems on the planet — between a quarter and one-third of all marine species rely on them at some point in their life cycle.
And none is more vital than the Great Barrier Reef.
Covering nearly 133,000 square miles, it is the world’s largest coral reef and is home to more than 1,500 species of fish, 411 species of hard corals and dozens of other species.
It’s also a vital resource to Australia’s economy, contributing more than $5.6 billion annually and supporting tens of thousands of jobs.
The abnormally hot ocean temperatures that led to this year’s bleaching began in February and stretched all the way into early March. As you can see from the animation below, almost the entire reef was under a bleaching alert from mid-February until mid-March.
Temperatures have since cooled and the bleaching has subsided, but scientists in Australia are currently assessing the damage to the reef’s health.
A fuller picture should come into focus in the coming weeks. Though initial reports indicate that this year’s bleaching may not be as severe as in 2016 or 2017, Eakin says it appears few parts of the reef have been spared.
“This time it is not as intense, but it’s much more widespread, so we’re seeing it all over the Great Barrier Reef,” he said.

The future of coral reefs looks grim

Warm ocean temperatures are the main driver of coral bleaching.
Corals turn white as a stress response to warm water temperatures by expelling the algae that grows inside them, which is their main energy source and gives them their color.

Oceans are warming at the same rate as if five Hiroshima bombs were dropped in every second

Oceans are warming at the same rate as if five Hiroshima bombs were dropped in every second
Bleaching doesn’t kill coral immediately. But if temperatures remain high, eventually the coral will die, destroying a natural habitat for many species of marine life.
“When they’re bleached, corals are starving, injured and more susceptible to disease, so [recovery] is really a question of how long and intense the heat stress is and how healthy the coral was to begin with,” Eakin said.
For the Great Barrier Reef to fully recover from bleaching that has occurred would take decades, Eakin says.
But because of the massive amounts of heat the world’s oceans have already absorbed, the reef likely won’t have the chance to recover before it bleaches again.
“If it takes decades for a reef to recover … what chance do we have for reefs recovering when events are coming back this fast?” he said.
Though researchers around the world are exploring ways to revive reefs, Eakin says those efforts will not be enough if we don’t address the root cause of their demise — human-caused climate change.
“We have to address climate change if we want to have coral reefs in the future.”

Source: https://edition.cnn.com/2020/03/25/world/great-barrier-reef-bleaching-2020-climate-change-trnd/index.html

 

 

 

Coral spawning off eastern Taiwan recorded for first time

Photo contributed by Kuo Chao-yang

Photo contributed by Kuo Chao-yang

Taipei, April 29 (CNA) The phenomenon of coral reefs simultaneously releasing their tiny eggs and sperm into the ocean, known as coral spawning, has been recorded off Taiwan’s eastern coast for the first time, according to a team from Academia Sinica.

The coral spawning, which creates the appearance of an underwater blizzard with billions of colorful flakes, takes place once a year on cues from the lunar cycle and water temperature and often coincides with the birthday of the sea goddess Matsu in the spring.

The Biodiversity Research Center (BRC) of Academia Sinica has spent most of its time and resources in the past recording the spectacle in Kenting in southern Taiwan and in the Penghu Islands off the coast of western Taiwan during the coral’s breeding season.

This year, however, center researchers went to Taitung County in southeastern Taiwan on April 25 and 26 and discovered coral spawning off the coast of the port town of Jihui (基翬) for the first time.

BRC researcher Chen Chao-lun (陳昭倫) said he and his colleagues recorded seven kinds of hermaphrodite corals that have both male and female sex organs simultaneously releasing eggs and sperm, called gametes, into the ocean.

“It was like it was snowing underwater, with pink and purple gametes floating everywhere,” Chen said.

Another special coral spotted spawning was the Goniopora tenuidens, a rare gonochoric species in Taiwan that is unisexual and only releases its sperm, Chen said.

“The great amount of sperm released by the Goniopora tenuidens looked like a thin white fog around the coral colonies,” the researcher said.

Even though the discovery of the underwater spectacle showed the corals in eastern Taiwan to be healthy and capable of reproduction, the species’ habitat is nonetheless being threatened with destruction due to human activity, Chen said.

In late February, Chen and two NGOs, the Taiwan Environmental Information Association and Citizen of the Earth, released a joint statement saying the environmental evaluation of a development project near the Jihui coast did not include an assessment of its impact on coral reefs.

Work on the project, called “Baosheng Marine Eco-park,” kicked off on March 1, and Baosheng Corporation Chairman Lu Ming-hsien (呂明賢) said the project would not endanger the coral colonies because the construction site is a few hundred meters from the coast.

But the digging up of soil for other construction along the coast already seems to be having a negative effect on the coral reef’s health, environmental groups suggested.

The proportion of coral covered with sediment in Jihui reached an all-time high of 21.9-22.5 percent in February 2019, up from 15 percent to 20.63 percent in May 2018, according to an assessment report presented jointly by Chen and the two NGOs.

The coral reefs will get sick or even suffocate if covered by an excessive amount of sediment, the report said.

It even went further, saying that mass death of corals is inevitable “if any land-based development project nearby loosens the topsoil, which will be washed down by heavy rain into the ocean.”

On March 1, the Environmental Protection Administration (EPA) said it would send delegates to Jihui to understand the impact of Baosheng’s project on the marine ecology and decide whether an underwater evaluation is needed.

The EPA has yet to reach a decision.

(By Wu Hsin-yun and Chi Jo-yao)

Source: https://focustaiwan.tw/sci-tech/201904290021