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Saturday 15 October 2016

Great Barrier Reef passed away in 2016 after a long illness. It was 25 million years old.



Assalamualakum..... Hye uollss.... Today...Mia nk share some knowledge utk uolls cuci mata and polished sikit otak uolls...baca something good for yourself...yes..you!!! (especially utk uolls yg suka dgn marine environment laa..)  Hahaaahaha... Okay~~~~ Lets start....


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A dying giant clam in the Great Barrier Reef following severe bleaching in winter 2016.  


Rowan Jacobson has a must read piece in Outside Magazine titled — Obituary: Great Barrier Reef (25 Million BC-2016).

Almost a quarter of the coral on the Great Barrier Reef of Australia, which is 1,400 miles long, with 2,900 individual reefs and 1,050 islands, is now dead. 93% of the reef is damaged. Because of our relentless burning of fossil fuels, corals throughout the world are experiencing a deadly event called bleaching. Hot ocean water causes the coral to vomit out the algae which gives the coral it’s color and which provides it’s sustenance.

For most of its life, the reef was the world’s largest living structure, and the only one visible from space. It was 1,400 miles long, with 2,900 individual reefs and 1,050 islands. In total area, it was larger than the United Kingdom, and it contained more biodiversity than all of Europe combined. It harbored 1,625 species of fish, 3,000 species of mollusk, 450 species of coral, 220 species of birds, and 30 species of whales and dolphins. Among its many other achievements, the reef was home to one of the world’s largest populations of dugong and the largest breeding ground of green turtles. 
The reef was born on the eastern coast of the continent of Australia during the Miocene epoch. Its first 24.99 million years were seemingly happy ones, marked by overall growth. It was formed by corals, which are tiny anemone-like animals that secrete shell to form colonies of millions of individuals. Its complex, sheltered structure came to comprise the most important habit in the ocean. As sea levels rose and fell through the ages, the reef built itself into a vast labyrinth of shallow-water reefs and atolls extending 140 miles off the Australian coast and ending in an outer wall that plunged half a mile into the abyss. With such extraordinary diversity of life and landscape, it provided some of the most thrilling marine adventures on earth to humans who visited. Its otherworldly colors and patterns will be sorely missed.
No one knows if a serious effort could have saved the reef, but it is clear that no such effort was made. On the contrary, attempts to call attention to the reef’s plight were thwarted by the government of Australia itself, which in 2016, shortly after approving the largest coal mine in its history, successfully pressured the United Nations to remove a chapter about the reef from a report on the impact of climate change on World Heritage sites. Australia’s Department of the Environment explained the move by saying, “experience had shown that negative comments about the status of World Heritage-listed properties impacted on tourism.” In other words, if you tell people the reef is dying, they might stop coming.
The Great Barrier Reef was predeceased by the South Pacific’s Coral Triangle, the Florida Reef off the Florida Keys, and most other coral reefs on earth. It is survived by the remnants of the Belize Barrier Reef and some deepwater corals.
 



Lots of Love, Mia

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