Great Barrier Reef temperatures hit 400-year record

SYDNEY, Australia — For the last ten years, 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 "extremely concerned" about the reef, describing the temperature increases as "unprecedented."

"These are corals that have lived for 400 years, and this is the warmest temperatures they're experiencing. These are the Redwood trees of the reef," she told AFP.

Often dubbed the world's largest living structure, the Great Barrier Reef is a 2,300-kilometer-long expanse, home to a stunning array of biodiversity that includes more than 600 types of coral and 1,625 fish species.

Repeated mass bleaching events — when extreme heat saps the coral of nutrients and color — threaten the reef's fragile ecosystem.

Coral bleaching occurs when water temperatures rise more than 1 degree Celsius.

'Changes happening too quickly'

The Australian researchers examined sea surface temperatures in the Coral Sea — a 2,000-kilometer stretch of ocean that extends down the northeast coast and includes the Great Barrier Reef.

Scientists used coral skeleton samples to reconstruct sea surface temperatures from 1618 to 1995, as well as more recent data.

They found temperatures before 1900 had been relatively stable, but the sea had warmed 0.12 C on average since 1960 until the present.

McGregor said that although corals could recover, increasing high temperatures and repeated bleaching events were straining that ability.

"These changes — from what we're seeing so far — appear to be happening too rapidly for the corals to adapt to, so it really threatens the reef as we know it," said McGregor, a climate researcher at the University of Wollongong.

This year's bleaching event has left 81 percent of the reef with extreme or high levels of damage — one of the most severe and widespread on record, the latest government data shows.

'Existentially threatened'

Richard Leck, World Wide Fund Australia's head of oceans, said the future of the reef was "increasingly vulnerable."

"At the moment, we can see the reef is resilient. It's bounced back from previous coral bleaching events but at some point, that elastic band will snap," he told AFP.

"Coral reefs, as an ecosystem, are the first ecosystem on the planet to be existentially threatened by climate change."

"I think we have to be hopeful that the world is not going to stand by and let that happen. But it is a fraction of a second to midnight," he said.

Australia has invested about AU$5 billion ($3.2 billion) in improving water quality, reducing the effects of climate change, and protecting threatened species.

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