Parts of Australia's Great Barrier Reef show highest coral cover in 36
years
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[August 04, 2022]
By Sonali Paul and James Redmayne
MELBOURNE/
SYDNEY (Reuters) -Two-thirds of
Australia's Great Barrier Reef showed the largest amount of coral cover
in 36 years, but the reef remains vulnerable to increasingly frequent
mass bleaching, an official long-term monitoring programme reported on
Thursday.
The recovery in the central and northern stretches of the UNESCO world
heritage-listed reef contrasted with the southern region, where there
was a loss of coral cover due to crown-of-thorns starfish outbreaks, the
Australian Institute of Marine Sciences (AIMS) said in its annual
report.
"What we're seeing is that the Great Barrier Reef is still a resilient
system. It still maintains that ability to recover from disturbances,"
AIMS monitoring programme leader Mike Emslie told Reuters.
"But the worrying thing is that the frequency of these disturbance
events are increasing, particularly the mass coral bleaching events," he
said.
The report comes as UNESCO considers whether to list the Great Barrier
Reef as "in danger", following a visit by UNESCO experts in March. The
World Heritage Committee meeting where the fate of the reef was on the
agenda was due to be held in Russia in June but was postponed.
In a key measure of reef health, AIMS defines hard coral cover of more
than 30% as high value, based on its long-term surveys of the reef.
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Assorted reef fish swim above a staghorn coral colony as it grows on
the Great Barrier Reef off the coast of Cairns, Australia October
25, 2019. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
On the northern region, average hard coral cover grew to 36% in 2022
from a low of 13% in 2017, while on the central region hard coral
cover increased to 33% from a low of 12% in 2019 - the highest
levels recorded for both regions since the institute began
monitoring the reef in 1985.
In the southern region, however, which generally has higher hard
coral cover than the other two regions, cover fell to 34% in 2022
from 38% a year earlier.
The recovery comes after the fourth mass bleaching in seven years
and the first during a La Nina event, which typically brings cooler
temperatures. While extensive, the institute said, the bleaching in
2020 and 2022 was not as damaging as in 2016 and 2017.
On the down side, the growth in cover has been driven by Acropora
corals, which AIMS said are particularly vulnerable to wave damage,
heat stress and crown-of-thorns starfish.
"We're really in uncharted waters when it comes to the effects of
the bleaching and what it means moving forward. But as of today,
it's still a fantastic place," Emslie said.
(Reporting by Sonali Paul in Melbourne and James Redmayne in Sydney;
Editing by Stephen Coates)
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