Off the wire
Vietnam plans to send more skilled workers abroad to curb unemployment  • Israel keeps positive image among Americans: Gallup  • New Zealand carbon sink finding could influence global climate treaties  • Washington's National Zoo kicks off events to send off Giant Panda Bao Bao  • U.S. diplomatic, homeland security chiefs to visit Mexico  • Tokyo stocks retreat in morning as exporters drop on yen's rise  • Venezuela pulls plug on CNN in Spanish  • Urgent: Malaysia arrests another suspect in connection with the death of DPRK man  • Xinhua China news advisory -- Feb. 16  • China treasury bond futures open mixed Thursday  
You are here:   Home

Australia's Great Barrier Reef "won't heal on its own"

Xinhua, February 16, 2017 Adjust font size:

Researchers in Queensland have discovered more evidence on the degradation of Australia's Great Barrier Reef, it has been revealed Thursday.

As water temperatures continue to rise, coral bleaching grows as a threat to the Great Barrier Reef.

Shallow water reefs are affected more significantly that their deeper water counterparts and hopes that it may be possible to "reseed" these areas affected by climate change have been quashed by a study conducted by the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and the University of Queensland's Global Change Institute.

"We argue that this concept of deep coral populations reseeding' their shallow-water counterparts may be relevant to some species, but is ultimately unlikely to aid more broadly in the recovery of shallow reefs," Author of the study Dr. Pim Bongaerts said.

The study took place in Bermuda and screened the genomes of more than 200 different coral colonies and found deep and shallow water reefs varied greatly.

The reefs won't "sort themselves out," Bongaerts said

"Instead, the responsibility for their future lies with us. If we want to have any chance of preserving these unique and diverse ecosystems, it is crucial that we start curbing our emissions and divest from fossil fuels." Endit