Weather patterns over the next few weeks will be critical in determining the overall extent and severity of coral bleaching across the Marine Park
The Great Barrier Reef. Pic/AP
Australia’s Great Barrier Reef is suffering widespread and severe coral bleaching due to high ocean temperatures two years after a mass bleaching event. The report by the Great Barrier Reef Marine Authority, which manages the world’s largest coral reef ecosystem, comes three days before a United Nations delegation is due to assess whether the reef’s World Heritage listing should be downgraded due to the ravages of climate change.
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“Weather patterns over the next few weeks will be critical in determining the overall extent and severity of coral bleaching across the Marine Park. Bleaching has been detected across the Marine Park—it is widespread but variable, across multiple regions, ranging in impact from minor to severe,” the authority said. The reef has suffered significantly from coral bleaching caused by unusually warm ocean temperatures in 2016, 2017 and 2020. The previous bleaching damaged two-thirds of the coral. The environmental group Greenpeace said the severe and widespread coral bleaching suffered during a La Nina weather pattern that is associated with cooler Pacific Ocean temperatures was evidence of the Australian government’s failure to protect the coral from the impacts of climate change.
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