时间:2024-11-22 00:49:30 来源:网络整理编辑:探索
In March, coral reef scientists first raised the alarm about the third-ever global coral bleaching e
In March, coral reef scientists first raised the alarm about the third-ever global coral bleaching event reaching the iconic Great Barrier Reef in Australia.
Now, following detailed surveys of 84 of those coral reefs, researchers say mass bleaching due to record warm ocean temperatures has killed 35% of corals on the northern and central Great Barrier Reef, while southern areas have seen much lighter damage.
The Great Barrier Reef is listed as a World Heritage Site and is a major tourist draw to Australia. The Australian government is extraordinarily sensitive about the ongoing bleaching, having lobbied to take the reef out of a recent report on the effects of climate change on World Heritage sites.
SEE ALSO:Great Barrier Reef may perish by 2030s as ocean temperatures skyrocket, study findsFor this survey, researchers from the ARC Center of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies took to the air and sea to determine the health of corals that comprise the Great Barrier Reef, which stretches for 2,300 kilometers, or 1,430 miles, from the northeastern tip of Queensland south to Townsville.
The scientists found that the hardest-hit reefs are located from Cairns to north of Cooktown.
“We found on average, that 35% of the corals are now dead or dying on 84 reefs that we surveyed along the northern and central sections of the Great Barrier Reef, between Townsville and Papua New Guinea,” said Terry Hughes, Director of the ARC Center of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at James Cook University, in a statement.
The reefs surveyed from Cairns southward were in far better shape, Hughes said. The average mortality of surveyed reefs south of Cairns was estimated to be just 5%.
The reefs in the southern parts of the Great Barrier Reef fared better because the ocean temperatures there were not as unusually mild.
Hughes said the coral bleaching event is a sign that global warming threatens the iconic but fragile Great Barrier Reef ecosystems.
Water temperatures in the Coral Sea, which encompasses much of the reefs, was record warm in March of this year.
The coral bleaching event is still underway in Australia and other parts of the world, and has been tied to the combination of human-caused global warming and an El Niño event that added more heat to Pacific Ocean temperatures, although that is now waning.
Coral bleaching occurs when coral expels the algae, known as zooxanthellae, that lives in its tissue, giving it color and nutrients. This action, caused by stresses such as increased water temperature and pollution, leaves the coral skeleton exposed, making it more susceptible to heat stress, disease and pollution.
Bleached corals can recover if the ocean waters cool or pollutants diminish. However, they can die if the stressors last too long.
A separate study looking at the effects of increasing water temperatures across the Great Barrier Reef recently projected that this year's extreme warmth is likely to take place once every two years by the year 2034, which presents a dire scenario for the long-term survival of the reefs.
That analysis' findings dovetail with other research that has predicted the mass die-off of coral reefs around the planet by the year 2050, as waters warm and exceed the tolerance level of many coral reef systems.
For the study, scientists found that human-caused global warming made the record warm ocean temperatures and related bleaching events seen this year at least 175 times more likely to occur.
“This year is the third time in 18 years that the Great Barrier Reef has experienced mass bleaching due to global warming, and the current event is much more extreme than we’ve measured before," Hughes said.
“These three events have all occurred while global temperatures have risen by just 1 degree Celsius above the pre-industrial period," he said. This works out to a temperature increase of 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit compared to preindustrial times.
“We’re rapidly running out of time to reduce greenhouse gas emissions,” Hughes said.
The estimated mortality from the 2015-16 coral bleaching event is not a final number, with additional surveys scheduled for the coming months to tally up the total loss of corals.
Fortunately for the Great Barrier Reef, the current forecast for heat stress and coral bleaching shows cooler conditions prevailing during the southern hemisphere's winter season, at least through September.
Meanwhile, heat stress will pose a major threat to corals in parts of the Northwestern Pacific Ocean, Indian Ocean and Caribbean.
Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.
Darth Vader is back. Why do we still care?2024-11-22 00:45
亞足聯官方:上海海港退出2022亞冠聯賽2024-11-22 00:36
揭秘王秋明加盟津門虎:放棄河北隊一大筆工資和獎金2024-11-22 00:32
滕哈格黃了?曼聯竟遭平民球隊截胡 全賴自己墨跡2024-11-22 00:23
Richard Branson 'thought he was going to die' in bike accident2024-11-22 00:00
安菲爾德錦鯉遊向聖西羅 奧裏吉即刻將簽下3+1合同2024-11-21 23:46
西英大對決OR西甲四占三 ? 皇馬黃潛靜待藍月紅軍2024-11-21 23:01
C羅遭打臉 !小球迷母親:絕不去曼聯 憑啥給他麵子2024-11-21 22:55
Whyd voice2024-11-21 22:33
德轉:廣州隊國腳張琳芃將加盟上海海港隊2024-11-21 22:21
Carlos Beltran made a very interesting hair choice2024-11-22 00:33
中國青年報:中超“風險”史無前例 能湊齊18隊參賽已不易2024-11-22 00:03
看完曼城大戰利物浦 理解了什麽是“人類高質量足球”2024-11-21 23:36
京媒:武磊郭田雨讓處於低穀的中國足球看到微光2024-11-21 23:23
Honda's all2024-11-21 23:20
西英大對決OR西甲四占三 ? 皇馬黃潛靜待藍月紅軍2024-11-21 23:13
敲定回歸!德轉朱藝:河北隊王秋明加盟天津津門虎2024-11-21 22:48
洛國富發文 :衷心感謝中國人民 這8年裏我感到賓至如歸2024-11-21 22:19
These glasses hide a fitness tracker on your face2024-11-21 22:13
巴西足壇奇聞 !主帥失控怒頂女邊裁 正中對方鼻子2024-11-21 22:10