Great Barrier Reef at ‘unprecedented’ risk of collapse after major bleaching event

The record-breaking marine heatwave in 2016 across the Great Barrier Reef has left much of the coral ecosystem at an “unprecedented” risk of collapse, research shows.

dead corals at Zenith Reef
A researcher from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies inspects a bleached coral at Zenith Reef in the northern section of the Great Barrier Reef in November 2016 . Image: Andreas Dietzel, CC BY 2.0

A new study published in Nature finds that the surge in sea temperatures during the 2016 bleaching event led to an immediate and long-lasting die-off of coral in the Great Barrier Reef.

This, in turn, led to vast swathes of the reef being transformed into “highly altered, degraded systems”, which are now vulnerable to total “ecological collapse”, the authors conclude.

The large-scale loss of coral is a “harbinger of further radical shifts in the condition and dynamics of all ecosystems”, they add, “if global action on climate change fails to limit warming to 1.5-2C above the pre-industrial baseline”.

Turning white

The Great Barrier Reef is the world’s largest coral reef, stretching 2,300 km from Papua New Guinea to the coast of Queensland, Australia. Over the past two decades, the Great Barrier Reef has seen four mass bleaching events, most recently in 2016 and 2017.

Coral bleaching is primarily caused by prolonged exposure to high sea temperatures. Under continued heat stress, the corals expel the tiny colourful algae living in their tissues—known as zooxanthellae—leaving behind a stark white skeleton.

The algae provide the corals with energy through photosynthesis. Without them, the corals can slowly starve. Healthy corals can live from two to several hundred years.

The mass bleaching event of 2016, which took place in the summer months of February, March and April, was the most devastating on record, affecting 94 per cent of reefs surveyed.

The new study estimates how heat exposure during this event affected the survival of coral and the make-up of species across the reef in the months that followed.

Less diversity of corals means less diversity of the fish, crabs, shrimp, clams, worms and other organisms that live on the reefs. 

Mark Eakin, coordinator, Coral Reef Watch programme, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) 

It finds that, after the event, many temperature-sensitive corals died suddenly as a result of heat stress, while others slowly starved over the course of several months. The paper concludes:

“The die-off of corals drove a radical shift in the composition and functional traits of swaths of the Great Barrier Reef from mature and diverse assemblages to highly altered, degraded systems.”

Coral carnage

To assess immediate coral death following the 2016 heatwave, the researchers used a combination of aerial and underwater surveys spanning the full length of the reef. They then revisited the survey sites eight months later to gather data on long-term coral mortality.

The researchers next compared information on coral mortality over the eight-month period to heat exposure data, which was calculated using records of sea surface temperatures.

The charts below show changes in coral cover over the study period (left)—with red showing high amounts of coral loss and green showing small amounts of gain—and local heat exposure (right), with red showing high exposure and blue showing low exposure.

Change in coral cover (left) and heat exposure (right) on the Great Barrier Reef between March and November 2016. On the left, red shows large losses in coral cover and green shows small gains in coral cover. On the right, red shows high heat exposure while blue shows low heat exposure. Source: Hughes et al. (2018)

The results find that patterns of coral mortality closely match those of heat exposure across the reef.

In the northern third of the reef, where heat exposure was at its highest, “many millions of corals” died quickly in the two-week period following the coral bleaching event.

This mass mortality was a consequence of immediate heat stress, rather than slow starvation, the paper notes.

During the following winter months, a large proportion of bleached corals in the northern and central Great Barrier Reef continued to die at “unprecedented” levels, the researchers say.

The research finds that parts of the reef exposed to sea surface temperatures of 4C during the summer months experienced declines in coral cover of around 40 per cent.

Meanwhile, reefs exposed to extreme temperatures of around 8C faced declines of 80 per cent or more, the research finds.

In comparison, in the most southerly part of the reef, where corals were exposed to temperatures of between 0-3C, almost no loss of coral was observed over the study period.

Lasting damage

As well as measuring coral mortality, the researchers also studied how the make-up of coral species changed over the eight-month period.

Their results indicate that some species were more affected by bleaching than others. This loss of species diversity could have far-reaching impacts on the coral ecosystem, says study co-author Dr Mark Eakin, coordinator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAACoral Reef Watch programme. He tells Carbon Brief:

“What you are seeing here is ecological homogenisation or flattening. It is a reduction in the diversity of corals that makeup the community. The problem with this is that one of the aspects that makes coral reefs important is their high biological diversity—the large number of species that live on them. Less diversity of corals means less diversity of the fish, crabs, shrimp, clams, worms and other organisms that live on the reefs.”

A typical coral reef can take 10-15 years to recover from a single bleaching event, Eakin says. However, climate change is causing the frequency of mass bleaching events to dramatically increase, he adds:

“The Great Barrier Reef lost approximately 29 per cent of its corals in 2016 and another 22 per cent in 2017. The second consecutive year of bleaching damaged many of the hardier corals that had survived the first bleaching event.

“Even worse, our paper in Science earlier this year showed that severe coral bleaching around the world happened about once every 30 years in the 1980s, but once every 6 years in the 2010s. This doesn’t give corals enough time to recover.”

Place for Paris

However, limiting global warming to 1.5C, which is the aspirational target of the Paris Agreement, could offer the Great Barrier Reef a better chance of survival, says lead author Prof Terry Hughes, director of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies. He tells Carbon Brief:

“We now have an international mechanisms, the Paris Agreement, to limit climate change. If we can achieve the 1.5-2C target, we can still have a healthy Great Barrier Reef.

“But it’s clear now that the future mix of coral species will be very different from just two years ago, before the unprecedented back-to-back bleaching in 2016 and 2017. Our study shows that this transition to a new, highly altered system is already underway—faster than any of us anticipated.”

The study “paints a bleak picture of the sheer extent of coral loss on the Great Barrier Reef” following the 2016 mass coral bleaching event, says Prof Nick Graham, chair in marine ecology at Lancaster University, who was not involved in the new research. He tells Carbon Brief:

“Huge losses of coral also occurred in many other countries across the Indian and Pacific Oceans in 2016. A future with coral reefs, their rich diversity, and the livelihoods they provide to millions of people, is quite simple. It will only be possible if carbon emissions are rapidly reduced and we limit warming to 1.5-2C.”

This story was published with permission from Carbon Brief.

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