Scientists from three research stations on the Great Barrier Reef have shared sobering accounts of the damage inflicted by the latest marine heatwave.
All along the Great Barrier Reef countless corals lie dead and dying in pretty turquoise waters, leaving the scientists who study them heavy with despair.
Some have been reduced to tears after visiting familiar research sites and finding landmark corals lifeless and smothered in brown algae.
The death is so widespread in the shallow lagoons of Heron, One Tree and Lizard islands that it鈥檚 palpable.
Mass coral bleaching is killing sections of the Great Barrier Reef. Photo / Getty Images
At One Tree Island Research Station, at the southern end of the reef, University of Sydney marine ecologist Dr John Turnbull can smell the decay.
It鈥檚 sour and sulphurous, as stressed and dying corals release chemicals into the water.
Colleague Dr Stephanie Gardner describes taking sediment samples back to the lab, and finding them smelly and weirdly sticky.
鈥滻t looks wrong. It feels wrong,鈥 the microbial ecologist says.
鈥滻t was really hard to go out that first day. We did probably 10 snorkels and I broke down about three times. Seeing the corals like that, on their last legs, it鈥檚 just horrifying.鈥
Horrifying. Horrible. Depressing. Distressing. Even catastrophic.
They鈥檙e words scientists reach for over and over again as they document the devastation caused by the marine heatwave that swept across the reef earlier this year, causing it鈥檚 fifth mass bleaching event in eight years.
Marine ecologist John Turnbull says he can smell the decay of corals from coral bleaching. Photo / Ed Roberts Arc Centre / Excellence for Coral Reef
On Lizard Island, at the northern end of the reef, Dr Anne Hoggett seems angry at the frequency of hits her beloved island has endured, as the world keeps trading in the fossil fuels that drive marine heatwaves.
She recalls the devastation of 2016 when corals bleached en masse at Lizard, where the Australian Museum owns and operates a research station used by scientists from all over the world.
鈥漈hey would have again in 2017 if there鈥檇 been any susceptible corals left to kill by then. But there wasn鈥檛.
鈥漈here was a reprieve in 2018 and 2019 but since 2020 the island鈥檚 reefs have bleached every single year.
鈥漅ight now we are seeing corals die, big time. Out on the reef flat, in the very shallow areas, we鈥檝e lost at least 80 per cent of the Acropora corals. It鈥檚 not all corals, but they are the dominant type in this area. So it鈥檚 huge.鈥
Hoggett knows the reef can recover if it gets enough of a break between hits.
There was certainly good recovery after the devastation of 2016, but with five events in as many years she wonders: 鈥淐an corals continue to recover like that? I don鈥檛 think so鈥.
After a reprieve in 2018 and 2019, the Lizard Island reefs have bleached every year.
Back in more southerly waters, at Heron Island Research Station, marine ecologist Dr Stuart Kininmonth says the seascape was completely changed by the marine heatwave.
And it happened in a few short weeks, 鈥渁lmost like a wildfire鈥 he says, with average water temperatures pushed to about 30C. Even deeper waters that should have been much cooler weren鈥檛.
鈥漇ome of the surveys I鈥檝e done around Heron, it鈥檚 pretty much close to 100 per cent of colonies are affected,鈥 the University of Queensland researcher says.
The result is a mix of dead corals and survivors that are trying to 鈥渃law their way back鈥 now water temperatures have returned to average.
While there鈥檚 some early evidence of some recovery, he鈥檚 worried because winter is coming and the corals so recently ravaged by extreme heat may not have time to build the sugar reserves they need to make it through.
Terry Hughes is an emeritus professor at James Cook University who sits on an independent panel of reef experts that advises the Australian Government.
He鈥檚 just returned from Heron Island and describes the damage there as catastrophic.
Below the surface at Great Barrier Reef. Photo / Tourism and Events Queensland.
鈥漇omewhere between 60 and 80 per cent of the corals on Heron, depending where you go, are already dead,鈥 he says.
As for the bleaching across the entire reef system, he says official maps show it鈥檚 huge. He is bothered by the disconnect between what 鈥渘on-government scientists鈥 from Heron, One Tree and Lizard islands are saying and the muted language coming from the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, which reports to federal Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek.
鈥滻t鈥檚 certainly being undersold as a catastrophic event,鈥 says the respected professor, who鈥檚 known for his frank commentary of reef management efforts. He also says that鈥檚 no surprise given the Government is lobbying hard to keep the reef from being listed as a World Heritage site in danger.
The World Heritage Committee will consider the issue at a meeting in July and the Government recently dispatched its special envoy for the reef, Senator Nita Green, and the chief executive of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, Josh Thomas, to Paris to meet Unesco.
The visit, in early April, was unannounced and details about exactly what was said are scant. AAP has asked to interview Green and Thomas but those requests have not been granted.
In a brief statement, Green said the meeting was to discuss 鈥渢he ongoing health, protection and management of our precious World Heritage site鈥 including the 鈥渟ignificant progress Australia is making in implementing climate action, water quality improvements and fisheries reform鈥.
Thomas also provided a brief written response, saying the reef authority detailed the latest information about the health of the reef, including the mass coral bleaching event declared by the authority on March 8.
He did not indicate what was said about its severity, nor did he answer questions about whether a preliminary assessment of coral deaths would be provided before the World Heritage Committee meeting in July.
Bleaching of coral on the Great Barrier Reef as seen in an aerial survey. Photo / Ed Roberts
The authority has previously warned a full assessment will take time, given not all bleached corals die. Some recover although can be at greater risk of disease, some die immediately, and others can die slowly over a period of months.鈥
鈥淚n-water surveys have now been completed and we鈥檙e compiling and analysing the data from numerous sources. Once this analysis is complete, we will be able to provide an assessment of mortality,鈥 Thomas said.
AAP also asked the environment minister for details about the Unesco meeting, including what was said about the severity of the bleaching.
A spokesperson told AAP the Government was 鈥渃ontinuing to engage constructively with Unesco, the World Heritage Advisory Bodies and the World Heritage Committee鈥 on the reef鈥檚 long-term health.
The statement also pointed to Labor鈥檚 emissions reduction and renewable energy targets, and its reef health investments, including projects to help aid bleaching recovery.
This article was originally published on the NZ Herald
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