There's more than one: Australia’s other great (and threatened) coral reefs

The Great Barrier Reef, despite its status, is not the only unique or threatened marine ecosystem in Australia.

Great Barrier Reef

Landscape of the Great Barrier Reef in the Coral Sea off the coast of Queensland, Australia. Source: AAP

The United Nations issued a dire alert Monday, warning that many of the world’s coral reefs could die as soon as 2040 as a result of climate change.

Already, warming waters have bleached more than two-thirds of the coral in the Great Barrier Reef, the world’s largest coral reef ecosystem, which covers more than 130,000 square miles and is visible from space.

But the Great Barrier Reef, despite its status, is not the only unique or threatened marine ecosystem in Australia.

University of Western Australia researchers at the Great Southern Reef at the Abrolhos Islands in Australia.
In a photo provided by Joan Costa, University of Western Australia researchers at the Great Southern Reef at the Abrolhos Islands in Australia. Source: The New York Times


Here are some other Australian ecosystems to keep in mind:

The Great Southern Reef

Stretching 27,000 square miles along Australia’s southern coast, this life-sustaining seaweed forest could be decimated by the end of the century, according to a recent study. The researchers found that warming waters could kill up to 100 percent of the reef’s kelp species, which provide a habitat for sponges, crustaceans and fish. The reef also supports two of Australia’s most valuable commercial fishing products: abalone and rock lobster.

Together with tourism at the Great Southern Reef, these fisheries contribute roughly $10 billion to the Australian economy per year. (By some estimates, this is more than the revenue generated annually by the Great Barrier Reef.) And though about 70 percent of Australians live within about 30 miles of the southern reef, many have never heard of it.

“The southern coastline is one of the most species-rich, temperate ecosystems in the world,” said Thomas Wernberg, a senior lecturer in marine science at the University of Western Australia in Perth, and the lead author of the recent paper. “It’s important to not forget these other ecosystems.”

Sea grasses in Shark Bay, on Australias west coast.
In a photo provided by Gary Kendrick, sea grasses in Shark Bay, on Australia's west coast. Source: The New York Times


Shark Bay

Shark Bay, on Australia’s west coast, is the largest and most diverse sea grass ecosystem in the world. These sea grasses provide habitat for fish, endangered green turtles and dugongs, the only vegetarian marine mammal, which rely on the sea grass for food. Shark Bay is also one of only two places in the world with living ancient deposits of algae, called stromatolites.

But in the summer of 2011, a huge ocean heat wave killed off roughly a quarter of Shark Bay’s sea grasses. Aside from the loss of a valuable ocean habitat, this die-off also meant the release of up to 9 million tons of carbon dioxide, according to a paper published earlier this year. It was an “unprecedented event,” said Oscar Serrano, a postdoctoral research fellow in marine ecosystems at Edith Cowan University in Queensland, and one of the study’s lead authors.

“It’s a big loss, but the oceans are dynamic and sea grass meadows have the capacity to adapt,” he added. “What worries me the most is these heat waves are predicted to increase both in magnitude and length. If there is another big heat wave, this may have a more severe impact.”

Water washes over exposed ledges of Ningaloo Reef at incoming tide.
Water washes over exposed ledges of Ningaloo Reef at incoming tide. Source: AAP


Ningaloo Reef

Every year, hundreds of whale sharks congregate at Ningaloo Reef, off the country’s west coast. Unlike the Great Barrier Reef, Ningaloo is a nearshore reef: “You can just snorkel off the beach and see coral in a few minutes,” said Verena Schoepf, a research fellow in marine science at the University of Western Australia.

So far, Ningaloo has escaped the kinds of bleaching events that have devastated the Great Barrier Reef and left the coral there weak and susceptible to attack by crown-of-thorns starfish. But global warming puts Ningaloo at risk of a die-off, according to the UN report, and rising sea levels may also reduce the reef’s capacity to protect coastal communities from waves and erosion.

An aerial view of the coastline along the Gulf of Carpentaria in East Arnhem, Australia.
An aerial view of the coastline along the Gulf of Carpentaria in East Arnhem, Australia. Source: The New York Times


Gulf of Carpentaria

The Gulf of Carpentaria, in Australia’s Far North, is a remote and sensitive ecosystem of mangroves, coral, sea grass beds, mud crabs, fish and shrimp. The mangrove trees — which grow in salty water — provide a nursery habitat for fish and wildlife and help prevent shoreline erosion.

But in the summer of 2016 — the same summer that the Great Barrier Reef experienced one of the worst bleaching events in history — extreme heat, drought and low sea levels led to an unprecedented die-off of mangroves in the Gulf of Carpentaria, in which about 6 percent of the forest was lost. Like sea grasses, mangroves also sequester carbon, and during the die-off, millions of tons of carbon were released into the atmosphere.

“The view has been that mangroves are tough and resilient and survive most things and indeed they can, but there are limits,” said Norman Duke, a professor and mangrove ecologist at James Cook University in Queensland. “It’s a wake-up call,” he said.


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5 min read
Published 9 October 2018 10:27am
By Livia Albeck-Ripka © 2018 New York Times News Service
Source: The New York Times


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