Half of Australia's Great Barrier Reef coral 'dead or dying'

spaminator

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Half of Australia's Great Barrier Reef coral 'dead or dying'
Colin Packham, Reuters
First posted: Wednesday, April 20, 2016 12:13 PM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, April 20, 2016 12:28 PM EDT
SYDNEY - Australian scientists said on Wednesday that just 7% of the Great Barrier Reef, which attracts around A$5 billion ($4.93 billion) in tourism every year, has been untouched by mass bleaching that is likely to destroy half the coral.
Bleaching occurs when the water is too warm, forcing coral to expel living algae and causing it to calcify and turn white. Mildly bleached coral can recover if the temperature drops, otherwise it may die.
Although the impact has been exacerbated by one of the strongest El Nino weather systems in nearly 20 years, scientists believe climate change is the underlying cause.
"We've never seen anything like this scale of bleaching before. In the northern Great Barrier Reef, it's like 10 cyclones have come ashore all at once," said Professor Terry Hughes, conveyor of the National Coral Bleaching Taskforce, which conducted aerial surveys of the World Heritage site.
"Our estimate at the moment is that close to 50% of the coral is already dead or dying," Hughes told Reuters.
The Great Barrier Reef stretches 2,300 km (1,430 miles) along Australia's northeast coast and is the world's largest living ecosystem.
"There were some who said that the worst had passed. We rejected that, and they were wrong," Environment Minister Greg Hunt told reporters. "Let it be known that this is a significant event. We take it seriously."
U.S. President Barack Obama embarrassed Australia 18 months ago by warning of the risk of climate change to the reef during a G20 meeting.
UNESCO's World Heritage Committee last May stopped short of placing the Great Barrier Reef on an "in danger" list, but the ruling raised long-term concerns about its future.
Australia is one of the largest carbon emitters capita because of its reliance on coal-fired power plants for electricity.
Despite pledging to cut carbon emissions, Australia has continued to support fossil fuel projects, including Adani Enterprises Ltd's proposed A$10 billion ($9.86 billion) Carmichael coal project in the Galilee Basin in western Queensland.
"It's not good enough for them to say they care about the reef while they keep backing the coal industry and avoid tackling climate change," said Shani Tager, a Greenpeace campaigner.
The findings will likely place pressure on Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull ahead of an expected federal election on July 2.
Turnbull is an advocate of carbon trading and supports progressive climate policies, but has left some disappointed over a failure to strengthen his party's commitment to addressing climate change.
Half of Australia's Great Barrier Reef coral 'dead or dying' | World | News | To
 

MHz

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Is that like a rock turning to stone?

The breeding grounds of the world's biggest, hungriest sharks is getting too warm, so far I don't see a problem unless they come to the coast of BC and Alaska.
 

Blackleaf

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Is that like a rock turning to stone?

The breeding grounds of the world's biggest, hungriest sharks is getting too warm, so far I don't see a problem unless they come to the coast of BC and Alaska.

The biggest shark in the world - and, indeed, the biggest fish - is the whale shark, and it is a filter feeder which only eats plankton, including copepods, krill, fish eggs, Christmas Island red crab larvae and small nektonic life, such as small squid or fish. It is harmless to humans.

 

Ludlow

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wherever i sit down my ars
The biggest shark in the world - and, indeed, the biggest fish - is the whale shark, and it is a filter feeder which only eats plankton, including copepods, krill, fish eggs, Christmas Island red crab larvae and small nektonic life, such as small squid or fish. It is harmless to humans.

get some good filet's outa that bad boy
 

Angstrom

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If I don't feel any guilt for things that happened before I was born or have no control over do I still have to pay the tax.

Yes and you should feel shame and guilt for not feeling guilt. Come to thing of it, Let's tax that too.

What in the fukk!,,,does that have to do with this topic???

We are trying to solve the worlds problems, Can't you see?
 

captain morgan

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What in the fukk!,,,does that have to do with this topic???

Please do try and keep up

If I don't feel any guilt for things that happened before I was born or have no control over do I still have to pay the tax?

C'mon here.... You're in BC and there is no lack of tards that will buy into the save-the-planet-guilt-tax when they are buying the actual 'taxable' product that is slaughtering Gaia... Pretty ironic, non?

... I seem to recall that you have a degree of familiarity with the anti-forestry related movement in Clayquot Sound a few years back... All those eco-warriors that gathered to celebrate Gaia (along with Midnight Oil) ended-up trashing the actual grounds they vowed to protect
 

Ludlow

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If I don't feel any guilt for things that happened before I was born or have no control over do I still have to pay the tax?



Carbon tax . That is what it is all about.
Naw. Like everything else it's about whining.

Yes and you should feel shame and guilt for not feeling guilt. Come to thing of it, Let's tax that too.



We are trying to solve the worlds problems, Can't you see?
what by biotching and moaning about every farkin thang under the sun?