Ningaloo Reef in Western Australia is still fairly intact, but is
expected to bleach in future.
(Getty Images: Richard Lock) |
Key Points
|
That's the finding of research published today in the journal PLOS Climate, which comes as reef scientists "anxiously" eye off the potential for bleaching events on the Great Barrier Reef and in Western Australia over the coming weeks.
Currently about 84 per cent of the world's coral reefs are buffered from ocean warming by influences like cool upwellings, deep water, and cooler ocean currents.
But today's research shows that figure will drop to just 0.2 per cent of reefs when global warming breaches 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.
We're currently forecast to hit 1.5C in the 2030s, and it's believed that there's now almost no chance of staying under that limit without extremely aggressive cuts to emissions and unproven carbon capture technologies that can draw CO2 from the atmosphere.
The Great Barrier Reef suffered bleaching events in 2016, 2017, and 2020, and the co-author of today's paper, Scott Heron from James Cook University, said scientists were anxiously watching weather patterns in Queensland's north, and off the northern WA coast.
Scientists are anxiously watching conditions in the Great Barrier
Reef.
(Getty Images: Brett Monroe Garner) |
"We're at a point of social anxiety among the coral reef community, wondering what the next month may hold."
But there are already signs of corals fluorescing — a sign of distress in some species — and some whiteness has been observed, according to marine biologist Jodie Rummer from JCU.
She says temperatures are already high and if there are cumulative days of heating over the next weeks or months, bleaching is likely to occur.
"We've got temperatures that are warmer than expected [and] there's not as much mixing [of water] as we'd hoped, despite it being a La Nina," Dr Rummer said.
Marine biologist Mike van Keulen from Murdoch University in Perth says there are already "signs of coral stress" in north-west Western Australia as well.
Warm waters in the north can cause coral stress down much of the WA coastline, Dr van Keulen says.
"Particularly for WA, that becomes a problem because the warm water to the north of us seeds the Leeuwin current that runs down our coast.
"The last big event we had in 2011 bleached corals all the way down to Rottnest Island [off Perth]."
At 2C, no reef will be spared
In order to understand the future of coral reefs globally, Dr Heron and colleagues from the University of Leeds and Texas Tech University modelled the impact of warming on reefs down to a resolution of 1 square kilometre.
At 1.5C of warming, they found only a few reefs in Polynesia and the Coral Triangle in the western Pacific would be spared recurring "thermal stress events" at least once every 10 years, according to Dr Heron.
"There were very few places around the world [that would be spared] and they were focused in the area of French Polynesia and the Coral Triangle," he said.
Many of the more delicate and colourful corals will disappear as we
head towards 1.5C of warming.
(Getty Images: Colin Baker) |
Thermal stress events are periods of elevated sea-surface temperature capable of causing "significant coral bleaching".
No reefs in Australia will be immune to regular thermal stress events once warming reaches 1.5C, they concluded.
At 2C of warming, no reefs worldwide will be spared the impact of climate change.
Today's findings, and the prospect of yet another bleaching event, underline how important climate action is for the reef, Dr Rummer said.
"All of these secondary and tertiary issues the reef is facing, it's not going to matter if we fix them without addressing the real problem, which is climate change," she said.
A number of scientists, including Dr Rummer, were critical of last week's pledge by the federal government for $1 billion over nine years for the reef, without also committing to ambitious climate action.
Dr van Keulen says programs that will be funded under the government's pledge, which are aimed at improving the resilience of corals, are "too little, too late".
"We've got climate change that causes consecutive years of bleaching; there's no way we can return to normal from here.
"The only chance we can make a difference is to rapidly wind back emissions."As we approach 1.5C, Dr van Keulen says the delicate, colourful corals we associate with tropical holidays will be gone.
As they go, we will see "huge flow-on effects" in fish abundance and diversity, which will also impact many commercial industries like seafood and tourism.
Dr Heron says the more we study the impacts of climate change on reefs, the more we realise we're heading toward a "cliff face".
Links
- $1b plan to save Great Barrier Reef will fail without action on climate change, scientist says
- Great Barrier Reef 'seen from outer space, not an office in Paris', says Minister rebuking UNESCO's warning
- First it was the reef, now the seagrass beds feeding our dugongs are sounding the climate change alarm
- (AU The Guardian) Great Barrier Reef On Verge Of Another Mass Bleaching After Highest Temperatures On Record
- (AU ABC) Coral Reef Safe Zones Set To Plummet, While Potential Bleaching Events Loom In Qld, WA
- Let's strip away the politics and look at the facts — the things that actually matter to the reef
- Morrison government announces $1bn pledge for Great Barrier Reef over the next decade
- Great Barrier Reef: Australia must act urgently on water quality, says Unesco
- Australia must choose between coal and coral – the Great Barrier Reef depends on it
- Great Barrier Reef authority a 'shell of its former self', says Queensland minister
No comments :
Post a Comment