Fears flood water runoff could ´smother´ Barrier Reef
Parts of northern Queensland are still reeling after nearly two weeks of unprecedented rainfall that turned roads into rivers and inundated hundreds of homes with floodwater.
SYDNEY: Runoff from recent floods in northern Australia is flowing onto parts of the Barrier Reef, scientists said Friday, starving coral of light and providing fodder for the predatory crown-of-thorns starfish.
Parts of northern Queensland are still reeling after nearly two weeks of unprecedented rainfall that turned roads into rivers and inundated hundreds of homes with floodwater.
Scientists at James Cook University say the floods swelled a number of rivers along hundreds of kilometres of coastline, spilling sediment onto the reef which has reduced water quality and much-needed sunlight.
"Coral reef and seagrass need light to maintain their growth and health," researcher Jane Waterhouse from James Cook University told AFP.
Calm weather following the extended period of rain means the murky water is yet to disperse.
It threatens to "smother" coral in areas worst hit, like at the mouth of north Queensland´s Burdekin river, where a brown flood plume has spread some 100 kilometres offshore.
"If that were to stay there then eventually, it would not take that long for some of those systems to die off," Waterhouse added.
The effects will not be fully understood until monitoring was completed over the next few of months after sediment has dispersed and settled.
The 2,300-kilometre (1,400-mile) reef has already suffered from back-to-back coral bleaching in 2016 and 2017, where swathes have been killed by rising sea temperatures linked to climate change.
The predatory crown-of-thorns starfish, which eat coral, have also proliferated on the reef due to pollution and agricultural runoff.
The recent floods have exacerbated the runoff, causing algae to grow in some areas.
"This provides a brilliant food source to allow those populations to thrive," Waterhouse added.
-
Ohio daycare worker 'stole $150k in payroll scam', nearly bankrupting nursery
-
Michelle Yeoh gets honest about 'struggle' of Asian representation in Hollywood
-
US, China held anti-narcotics, intelligence meeting: State media reports
-
Goldman Sachs’ top lawyer resigns over Epstein connections
-
Manhunt continues for suspect who killed 2 at South Carolina State University
-
Trump considers scaling back trade levies on steel, aluminium in response to rising costs
-
Trump revokes legal basis for US climate regulation, curb vehicle emission standards
-
DOJ blocks Trump administration from cutting $600M in public health funds