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'An Utter Tragedy': Great Barrier Reef Hit With Third Mass Bleaching Event In 5 Years

SYDNEY — The Great Barrier Reef, Australia’s underwater crown jewel, has been hit with the most severe and widespread mass bleaching event scientists have ever recorded and the third in just five years.

“For the first time, severe bleaching has struck all three regions of the Great Barrier Reef – the northern, central and now large parts of the southern sectors,” Terry Hughes, director of the country’s ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, said Tuesday.

Hughes recently finished a two-week survey of more than 1,000 reefs that make up the Great Barrier after a period of record or near-record heat around the globe. 2019 was the second-hottest year ever recorded and the world’s oceans were the warmest scientists have ever seen last year. And researchers said average sea temperatures in February on the reef were in places 1.25C above normal, the highest readings since record-keeping began in 1900.

Those statistics are bad news for the delicate coral polyps that make up the region’s iconic reefs. Corals bleaching occurs most often when sea temperatures spike above normal, effectively cooking the structures and leaving them direly weakened. In minor cases, reefs can recover, and some types of coral are more resilient than others. But in severe cases, many corals die. Hughes noted in an article on Tuesday that in 2016, another year that saw a mass bleaching event, half of the shallow water corals in parts of the Great Barrier died between March and November of that year.

During last month’s surveys, Hughes said about 60% of the reefs observed were bleached either moderately or severely, prompting him to opine that he felt like “an art lover wandering through the Louvre....as it burns to the ground.”

“I’m not sure I have the fortitude to do this again,” Hughes continued on Tuesday after the news on the extent of the bleaching was released. “It’s heartbreaking to see the Great Barrier Reef decline so fast.”

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