Aerial view of Hardy Reef, to the heart reef, in the Great Barrier Reef CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 |
Butterfly fishes on Great Barrier Reef. (Hunter 2014) |
Many fish use reefs as an area
of refuge, so a decrease in coral will cause a similar decrease in species
present. This is a common reaction and can be seen in areas like kelp forests
after large storms or diseases wipe out the kelp. While the skeletons of the
coral may still provide refuge, living coral is an integral part of a coral
reef ecosystem, and without it many fish will no longer be able to survive (Wilson 2006). Coral is also a
common food of corallivorous fish such as the chevron butterflyfish (Chaetodon
trifascialis) and the bumphead
parrotfish (Bolbometopon muricatum) (Pratchet 2005). These fish are
often part of the backbone of the food web and are the prey of many important
predators. Coral reefs can also provide an easy and central space for many
species of fish to spawn. It isn’t uncommon to see hundreds of the same fish
all grouped together for spawning along with many other fish hanging around for
an easy meal. If the reefs disappear, this whole delicate ecosystem will
collapse, having lasting repercussions on marine and human life.
Trends in bleaching stress along the Great Barrier Reef (Spalding et al. 2017) |
The death of the Great Barrier reef will affect humans greatly as well, especially considering how many people rely on money from fish caught there and tourism from people who want to see it. The reef directly supports 64,000 jobs in Australia and has been valued at A$56 billion with a contribution of A$6.4 billion each year to the Australian economy (O'Mahoney, 2017). These reefs also act as important guards against storms and waves, acting as break waters to mitigate raging seas. Without the healthy reefs the waves can simply break through the dead, calcified coral and make it to land unhindered (Guannel 2016). As stated by Guannel, live corals “moderate the impact of waves and storms, thereby further reducing the vulnerability of coastal regions”. Without the money from tourism a good amount of people will lose their livelihoods in Queensland and the surrounding areas, with the same happening to many fishermen and charter boats. Even fisheries that exist off the Great Barrier reef could be impacted due to fish loosing spawning grounds and refuges for certain parts of the year
A school of bumphead parrotfish (Bolbometopon muricatum) (LTMP, AIMS) |
The Great Barrier reef is the
source of habitat and food for hundreds of thousands of fish species and is an
ecological hub of activity. The bleaching of this reef system would spell
disaster for the food web of the area and could have lasting impacts around
Australia and beyond. This not only will affect the fish that live and feed
there, but also the humans that make their livelihoods off activities based
around the reef. The reef also protects the coast of Queensland from intense
waves and storms, acting as a natural sea wall. Without this the people living
along the coast would be in more danger from storms than before. What is
happening to the Great Barrier Reef is not unusual, and many other reefs around
the world are facing the same issues. As Hughes (2018) said, “we are already
approaching a scenario in which every hot summer, with or without an El Niño
event, has the potential to cause bleaching and mortality at a regional scale”.
The time between these bleaching events is getting smaller and smaller, not
allowing the coral populations to recover between the events (Hughes et al.
2018). In order to protect the reef and other areas sensitive to climate
change, global emissions must drop to 55% by 2030 (IPCC, 2018)
to prevent the atmosphere from warming another 1.5 degrees Celsius. This means
a decrease from 53.5 gigatons of equivalent carbon dioxide to 29 gigatons, a
difference of about 24.5 gigatons. Unless something is done, the reef will die
and with it many of the fish that rely on it for their survival.
Values from Great Barrier Reef ecosystem (O'Mahoney 2017). |
Hughes, T. et al. 2018. Spatial
and temporal patterns of mass bleaching of corals in the Anthropocene. Science,
80-83.
De'ath G, L. J. 2013. Declining coral
calcification on the Great Barrier Reef. Science, 342(6158):559.
Greg Guannel, K. A. 2016. The Power of Three:
Coral Reefs, Seagrasses and Mangroves Protect Coastal Regions and Increase
Their Resilience. PLOS One.
Hunter, J. 2014. Great Barrier Reef
Gets A Little Good News. Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved from www.smithsonianmag.com:
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/great-barrier-reef-warming-good-news-180951762/
IPCC. (2018). SPECIAL REPORT: GLOBAL WARMING
OF 1.5 ºC. Geneva: World Meteorological Organization.
James, L. E. (2018). Half of the Great Barrier
Reef Is Dead. National Geographic.
O'Mahoney, R. S. (2017). At what price?
The economic, social and icon value of the Great Barrier Reef. Brisbane:
Deloitte. Retrieved from www2.deloitte.com/au.
Lamb, J. B. (2018). Plastic waste
associated with disease on coral reefs. Science, 460-462.
LTMP, AIMS. (n.d.). A school of bumpheaded
parrotfish (Bolbometapon muricatum). Retrieved from eatlas.org.au:
https://eatlas.org.au/media/240
NOAA. (2018. Coral Bleaching During
& Since the 2014-2017 Global Coral Bleaching Event Status and an Appeal
for Observations. Retrieved from coralreefwatch.noaa.gov:
https://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov/satellite/analyses_guidance/global_coral_bleaching_2014-17_status.php
Pratchet, M. 2005. Dietary overlap among
coral-feeding butterflyfishes (Chaetodontidae) at Lizard Island, northern
Great Barrier Reef. Marine Biology, 373-382.
Scott F. Heron, J. A. 2016. Warming Trends and
Bleaching Stress of the World’s Coral Reefs 1985–2012. Scientific Reports.
Spalding, M., L. Burke, S.A. Wood, J. Ashpole, J.
Hutchison, P. z. Ermgassen. 2017. Mapping the global value and distribution of
coral reef tourism. Marine Policy
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Wilson, S. 2006. Multiple disturbances and the
global degradation of coral reefs: are reef fishes at risk or resilient? Global
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