Only Way to Stop Deadly Coral Bleaching Is to Cut Fossil Fuel Burning, Says Major New Research

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Coral reefs across the globe cannot be saved from devastating bleaching events unless rapid action is taken to cut greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel burning, major new research hasย found.

Published in the journal Nature, the research finds the worldโ€™s biggest reef system โ€” the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) in Australia โ€” has been suffering the impacts of global warming since its first mass bleaching hit inย 1998.

Now, after two further major bleaching events, the authors says nine out of ten individual reefs that make up the 1400-mile long system along the Queensland coast have bleached at leastย once.

In early 2016, record warm ocean temperatures turned corals a ghostly white โ€” a stress reaction where the corals expel the special algae that give them their colour and much of theirย nutrients.

As a result, almost a quarter of all corals on the reef, mainly in the once โ€œpristineโ€ northern section, died. The bleaching on the GBR was part of the third mass global bleaching event declared by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

The research comes as a fourth major mass bleaching event is unfolding across the iconic reef, only a year after the most devastating bleaching in the reefโ€™sย history.

Global Warming Already Hittingย Reefs

Bleaching occurs when corals sit in unusually warm water for too long. ย As a result, the corals expel the algae that gives them their color and much of their nutrients, leaving them starving. ย Corals can recover and the algae can repopulate, but if the heat stress is severe then the coral dies. ย Even recovered corals tend to beย weakened.

The new study, co-written by more than 45 scientists, looked at the bleaching events on the GBR in 1998, 2002, andย 2016.ย 

There was no evidence, the researchers found, that protecting reefs from overfishing or local pollution gave them resistance to the extreme heat stress that caused them toย bleach.

Speaking to the Positive Feedback podcast, lead author Professor Terry Hughes, director of the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at James Cook University, said: โ€œPeople often refer to global warming as a threat to coral reefs. The inference of the word โ€˜threatโ€™ is that itโ€™s something that might happen in the very nearย future.

โ€œBut the reality is that coral bleaching is already a recurrent event that has been happening now for about 20 years on most of the coral reefs of the world, including Australian coralย reefs.

โ€œWe canโ€™t climate-proof reefs. Sure, thereโ€™s stuff we need to do be doing locally around water quality and fisheries management, but doing these two things alone is notย going to protect the reefs in the long term. The elephant in the room here is climateย change.โ€

Paris Targets Notย Enough

The international climate agreement signed in Paris asks nations to submit plans to cut emissions that eventually will keep global warming โ€œwell below 2 Cโ€ with an ultimate aim to keep temperatures to 1.5ย Celsius.

But Hughes pointed out the severe bleaching events across the Great Barrier Reef had all occurred with global warming at less than 1ย C.

โ€œThose targets of 1.5 C and 2 C wonโ€™t be very comfortable for the worldโ€™s coral reefs. We are going to see more of these bleaching events in the future,โ€ heย said.

The researchers also tested a hypothesis that if reefs had been bleached in the past, this could give them a โ€œprotectiveย effect.โ€ย 

After analyzing the pattern of bleaching, the researchers โ€œfind no evidence for a protective effect of pastย bleaching.โ€

While itโ€™s known that some corals are more resistant to bleaching than others, the researchers also found that in extreme bleaching events like that of 2016, even the hardiest corals canย die.

โ€œThus, even species that are winners on relatively mildly bleached reefs joined the ranks of losers where bleaching was more intense,โ€ theyย wrote.

Generally speaking, corals and reef habitats can survive and recover from some coral bleaching episodes if those reefs get enough time to recover before the next bleachingย hits.

Recoveryย Time

But the study explains that even โ€œgood colonizers and fast growersโ€ can take 10 to 15 years toย recover.ย 

The researchers do say that improving water quality and protecting areas from fishing can โ€œimprove the prospects for recoveryโ€ from bleaching, but only if major events donโ€™t come around tooย quickly.

Any attempts at bolstering the ability of corals to recover from bleaching โ€œwill become more challenging and less effectiveโ€ as the decades wear on, โ€œbecause local interventions have no discernible effect on resistance of corals to extreme heat stress,โ€ the researchersย say.

โ€œSecuring a future for coral reefs, including intensively managed ones such as the Great Barrier Reef, ultimately requires urgent and rapid action to reduce global warming,โ€ the paperย concludes.


Bleached staghorn coral on the Great Barrier Reef between Townsville and Cairns, Australia, March 2017.ย Credit:ย Bette Willis/ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reefย Studies

Australiaโ€™s Federal Government has approved plans for its biggest ever coal mine, Adaniโ€™s Carmichael mine, in Queensland with the coal to be exported on ships through the reefโ€™sย waters.

โ€œIt doesnโ€™t seem terribly logical, does it,โ€ Hughes told Positiveย Feedback.ย 

โ€œThere seems to be a policy disconnect in Australia between the governmentโ€™s aspirations to manage wisely the Great Barrier Reef for future generations on the one hand, versus current plans to expand the fossil fuel industry, including the Adaniย mine.โ€

Dr. Mark Eakin, director of Coral Reef Watch at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and a co-author of the study, says the rising ocean temperatures are the cause of the bleachingย events.

These rising ocean temperatures are caused by the โ€œincrease in heat trapping gases in the atmosphere โ€” CO2, methane, and others โ€” and this is being driven largely by humans and our burning of fossilย fuels.โ€

Eakinโ€™s Coral Reef Watch program is based at NOAAโ€™s National Environmental Satellite Data and Information Service โ€” an area reportedly being considered by the Trump administration for budget cuts as high as $513ย million.

โ€œItโ€™s not the greatest situation by any means,โ€ย saidย Eakin.

โ€œWe know for coral reefs that the real threat is coming from climate change thatโ€™s being driven by burning fossil fuels and thatโ€™s a tough situation to be in when those are now being encouraged by ourย government.โ€

Main image:ย Graveyard of Staghorn coral, Yonge reef, Northern Great Barrier Reef, October 2016 .Credit: Greg Torda/ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reefย Studies

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