Little fluffy clouds may help save Australia's Great Barrier Reef
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[September 28, 2021]
By Stefica Nicol Bikes
SYDNEY (Reuters) - To slow the speed at
which high temperatures and warm waters bleach the corals of the Great
Barrier Reef, Australian scientists are spraying droplets of ocean water
into the sky to form clouds to protect the environmental treasure.
Researchers working on the so-called Cloud Brightening project said they
use a turbine to spray microscopic sea particles to thicken existing
clouds and reduce sunlight on the world's largest coral reef ecosystem
located off Australia's northeast coast.
The water droplets evaporate leaving only tiny salt crystals which float
up into the atmosphere allowing water vapour to condense around them,
forming clouds, said Daniel Harrison, a senior lecturer at Southern
Cross University, who runs the project.
"If we do it over an extended period of time for a few weeks to a couple
of months when the corals are experiencing a marine heatwave we can
actually start to lower the water temperature over the Reef," said
Harrison.
The project had its second trial in March, the end of the Southern
Hemisphere summer when the Reef off Australia's northeast is at its
hottest, gathering valuable data on the atmosphere when corals are at
most risk of bleaching.
A combination of light and warm water causes coral bleaching. By cutting
light over the reef by 6% in summer, "bleaching stress" would be cut by
50% to 60% on the undersea ecosystem, Harrison said.
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A general view of Broadhurst Reef and a research vessel during the
second field trial at Broadhurst Reef on the Great Barrier Reef,
Queensland, Australia in March 2021, in this handout photo released
to Reuters on September 27, 2021. Brendan Kelaher/Handout via
REUTERS
But the benefits of cloud brightening would lessen
over time unless other measures slowed the march of climate change.
"If we do have really strong action on climate change then the
modelling shows that the cloud brightening is enough to stop the
reef declining and to actually see it through this period while we
reduce our carbon emissions," he said.
One of Australia's best-known natural attractions, the Reef came
close to being listed as an endangered World Heritage Site by the
United Nations, although it avoided the designation following
lobbying by Australia.
(Reporting by Stefica Nicol Bikes; Writing by Byron Kaye; Editing by
Christian Schmollinger)
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