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Study: Highest ocean temperatures in 400 years threaten Great Barrier Reef
Study: Highest ocean temperatures in 400 years threaten Great Barrier Reef
by Clyde Hughes
Washington DC (UPI) Aug 7, 2024
Ocean temperatures surrounding the Great Barrier Reef are at their highest levels in 400 years, threatening "critical damage" to the iconic ecosystem, a study released Wednesday found.

Ocean heat in the Coral Sea is facing back-to-back record temperature highs. Five of the six hottest years on record have come in the past 10 years where the heat pushed the record average to as much as 1 degree Celsius higher.

The results, which were reported in the study to be published in the Thursday edition of the journal Nature, led to mass bleaching events on the coral reef during the hottest months of January to March.

While coral reefs can bounce back from bleaching events, repeated bleaching can eventually kill the reef, scientists said. UNESCO recognized the significance of the Great Barrier Reef in 1981 by designating it as a World Heritage Site.

"When I plotted the 2024 data point, I had to triple check my calculations," Benjamin Henley, who led the study published in Nature, said, according to Phys.org. "It was off the charts, far above the previous record high in 2017. I could almost not believe it. Tragically, mass coral bleaching has occurred yet again this year."

Henley, who teaches at the University of Melbourne, said world leaders need to be more aggressive in addressing the climate or treasures like the Great Barrier Reef may be lost.

"In the absence of rapid, coordinated and ambitious global action to combat climate change, we will likely witness the demise of one of Earth's most spectacular natural wonders," he said.

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Great Barrier Reef ocean temperatures hit 400-year record: study
Sydney (AFP) Aug 7, 2024
For the past decade, water temperatures along Australia's famed Great Barrier Reef have been the warmest in 400 years, a major study said on Thursday. Ocean temperatures around the spectacular coral system have increased yearly since 1960 but were particularly hotter during recent mass coral bleaching events, according to a study in the science journal Nature. The warmer waters are most likely down to human-induced climate change, the report said. Co-author Helen McGregor said she was "extre ... read more

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