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Australia's Great Barrier Reef hit by 'worst' bleaching

This photo taken on November 20, 2014 shows an aerial view of the Great Barrier Reef off the coast of the Whitsunday Islands, along the central coast of Queensland. AFP PHOTO / SARAH LAI

Evidence that Australia's Great Barrier Reef is experiencing its worst coral bleaching on record has renewed calls for the UN to list it as "in-danger".

The National Coral Bleaching Taskforce says 95% of reefs from Cairns to Papua New Guinea are now severely bleached.

It says only four reefs out of 520 have no evidence of bleaching.

Unesco voted not to put the reef on its World Heritage in Danger list last year, but green groups want the decision reassessed.

Coral taskforce convener Professor Terry Hughes told the BBC his team was yet to find the southern border where the bleaching ended.

"Tomorrow we will continue further south from Cairns to Townsville about 400km (250 miles) and spend the day scoring another 150 reefs," Professor Hughes said.

Mass coral bleaching

-Coral bleaching is caused by rising water temperatures resulting from two natural warm currents

-It is exacerbated by man-made climate change, as the oceans are absorbing about 93% of the increase in the earth's heat

-Bleaching happens when corals under stress drive out the algae known as zooxanthellae that give them colour

-If normal conditions return, the corals can recover, but it can take decades, and if the stress continues the corals can die

-The current worldwide bleaching episode is predicted to be the worst on record

Experts say it is too early to tell whether the corals will recover, but scientists "in the water" are already reporting up to 50% mortality of bleached corals.

Climate change and the effects of El Nino are being blamed for the rise in sea temperatures that causes coral bleaching.

An undated handout photo obtained from the XL Catlin Seaview Survey on March 21, 2016 shows a diver filming a reef affected by bleaching off Lizard Island in the Great Barrier Reef. Environmental groups March 21 urged greater action on climate change after the government declared the highest alert level over an epidemic of coral bleaching in the pristine northern reaches of Australia's Great Barrier Reef. Photo: Handout / XL Catlin Seaview Survey / AFP

"What we're seeing now is unequivocally to do with climate change," Professor Justin Martin University of Queensland told the ABC.

"[At] the Paris climate change meeting, essentially the whole world has agreed this is climate change, and we're seeing climate change play out across our reefs".

World Wildlife Fund (WWF) spokesperson Nick Heath said the unspoiled northern section of the reef had acted as a vital bank of genetic material to reseed areas further to the south.

"We have been working to save the reef in [recent] years, and we always took for granted that we had the bank in the northern quarter that was safe, and seemed resilient in previous bleaching episodes, but now it's cooked to an inch of its life,"  Heath told the BBC.

The Department of the Environment said state and federal governments were investing a projected A$2bn ($1.5bn; £1bn) over the next decade to protect the reef.

 

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Australia's Great Barrier Reef hit by 'worst' bleaching

This photo taken on November 20, 2014 shows an aerial view of the Great Barrier Reef off the coast of the Whitsunday Islands, along the central coast of Queensland. AFP PHOTO / SARAH LAI

Evidence that Australia's Great Barrier Reef is experiencing its worst coral bleaching on record has renewed calls for the UN to list it as "in-danger".

The National Coral Bleaching Taskforce says 95% of reefs from Cairns to Papua New Guinea are now severely bleached.

It says only four reefs out of 520 have no evidence of bleaching.

Unesco voted not to put the reef on its World Heritage in Danger list last year, but green groups want the decision reassessed.

Coral taskforce convener Professor Terry Hughes told the BBC his team was yet to find the southern border where the bleaching ended.

"Tomorrow we will continue further south from Cairns to Townsville about 400km (250 miles) and spend the day scoring another 150 reefs," Professor Hughes said.

Mass coral bleaching

-Coral bleaching is caused by rising water temperatures resulting from two natural warm currents

-It is exacerbated by man-made climate change, as the oceans are absorbing about 93% of the increase in the earth's heat

-Bleaching happens when corals under stress drive out the algae known as zooxanthellae that give them colour

-If normal conditions return, the corals can recover, but it can take decades, and if the stress continues the corals can die

-The current worldwide bleaching episode is predicted to be the worst on record

Experts say it is too early to tell whether the corals will recover, but scientists "in the water" are already reporting up to 50% mortality of bleached corals.

Climate change and the effects of El Nino are being blamed for the rise in sea temperatures that causes coral bleaching.

An undated handout photo obtained from the XL Catlin Seaview Survey on March 21, 2016 shows a diver filming a reef affected by bleaching off Lizard Island in the Great Barrier Reef. Environmental groups March 21 urged greater action on climate change after the government declared the highest alert level over an epidemic of coral bleaching in the pristine northern reaches of Australia's Great Barrier Reef. Photo: Handout / XL Catlin Seaview Survey / AFP

"What we're seeing now is unequivocally to do with climate change," Professor Justin Martin University of Queensland told the ABC.

"[At] the Paris climate change meeting, essentially the whole world has agreed this is climate change, and we're seeing climate change play out across our reefs".

World Wildlife Fund (WWF) spokesperson Nick Heath said the unspoiled northern section of the reef had acted as a vital bank of genetic material to reseed areas further to the south.

"We have been working to save the reef in [recent] years, and we always took for granted that we had the bank in the northern quarter that was safe, and seemed resilient in previous bleaching episodes, but now it's cooked to an inch of its life,"  Heath told the BBC.

The Department of the Environment said state and federal governments were investing a projected A$2bn ($1.5bn; £1bn) over the next decade to protect the reef.

 

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