Terumbu Penghalang Besar rosak sebab
kenaikan suhu air laut
The bleaching - or loss of algae -
affects a 1,500km (900 miles) stretch of the reef, according to scientists.
The latest damage
is concentrated in the middle section, whereas last year's bleaching hit mainly the
north.
Experts fear the proximity of the
two events will give damaged coral little chance to recover.
Prof Terry Hughes, from James Cook
University, said governments must urgently address climate change to prevent
further bleaching.
"Since 1998, we have seen
four of these events and the gap between them has varied substantially, but
this is the shortest gap we have seen," Prof Hughes told the BBC.
"The sooner we take action on
global greenhouse gas emissions and transition away from fossil fuels to
renewables, the better."
Almost 800 coral reefs across
8,000km were assessed by the Australian Research Council's Centre of Excellence
for Coral Reef Studies.
The findings showed only the
southern section was relatively unscathed.
Researcher Dr James Kerry said the damage was unprecedented.
"The central third this year,
I would say, was as severe in terms of bleaching as what we saw as the northern
third last year," he told the BBC.
"For those reefs that were
hit two years in a row, it is effectively a double whammy. They have had no
chance to recover from last year's events."
§ Coral bleaching is caused by
rising water temperatures resulting from two natural warm currents.
§ It is exacerbated by man-made
climate change, as the oceans are absorbing about 93% of the increase in the
Earth's heat.
§ Bleaching happens when corals
under stress drive out the algae known as zooxanthellae that give them colour.
§ If normal conditions return,
the corals can recover, but it can take decades, and if the stress continues the
corals can die.
The latest damage happened without the assistance of El
Niño, a weather pattern previously associated with bleaching events.
The reef - a vast collection of thousands of smaller coral
reefs stretching from the northern tip of Queensland to the state's southern
city of Bundaberg - was given World Heritage status in 1981.
The UN says it is the "most biodiverse" of all the
World Heritage sites, and of "enormous scientific and intrinsic
importance".
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