Characterised by golden and giant kelp (which can grow half a metre per day),giant cuttlefish,sea lions,abalone,blue swimmer crabs and weedy seadragons,the reef has more unique species than its northern world heritage-listed counterpart.
“Seventy per cent of species are endemic,unique to the region,not found anywhere else,” Bennett said. “On the Great Barrier Reef about 3 per cent of species are endemic. What we have here is hugely unique.”
But the species of the Great Southern Reef have evolved over 50 million years to suit a narrow,normally stable temperature range. With an “off-the-charts” heatwave bearing down,Bennett and other scientists are concerned parts of the reef’s lush underwater kelp forests could be razed.
Bennett said efforts to monitor changes to the reef – which provides 20,000 tonnes of seafood per year and $11.5 billion worth of ecosystem services,including carbon uptake – are critically underfunded.
“We are running absolutely blind as to how the species are responding to change,” Bennett said.
“The government is funding species recovery plans and there’s a lot of emphasis on regeneration,recovery,restoring ecosystems. But unless we know how they’re changing in the first place,we have no capacity to respond.”
What are the effects of an intense marine heatwave?
Plibersek said she shared the concern of scientists and that the government would consider the letter alongside the recommendations of the senate inquiry into the reef which is due to be handed down next week.
In 2011,a marine heatwave destroyed a 100-kilometre stretch of kelp off the coast of WA. The 4 to 5 degree temperature spikeshuttered crab and scallop fisheries,ushered tropical species into Perth’s Swan River and drove little penguin breeding success to its lowest in 20 years.
The urgent goal ahead of the next severe heatwave is to be better prepared,said algal expert Professor Adriana Verges.
“The GSR provides a whole lot of benefits to us humans. The most obvious and economically valuable are fisheries – abalone and rock lobster are very valuable to Australia. It’s not just an ecological issue,it cascades onto the economy,” Verges,from UNSW,said.
A continent-spanning band of golden kelp,a common seaweed for Sydney and Melbourne beachgoers,makes up the backbone of the Great Southern Reef. But it’s vulnerable to heat stress and bleaching due to disease exacerbated by warmer water,Verges said.
When will the heatwave hit?
The heatwave will peak between December and February,and the most intense anomalies will flare off the coast of Tasmania,according to the Bureau of Meteorology.
The bureau’s oceanographer Grant Smith told AAP the heat could climb 2.5 degrees above the average,surpassing the highest temperature level on the forecasting scale.
“We didn’t account for anomalies that high when we developed this ... it could be 3C,it could be 3.5C,but we can’t see how high it goes,” Smith said.
Ocean temperatures around Australia have warmed 1.1 degrees since 1900 – which may not seem like much,but given that underwater is a fairly stable environment,small changes can be dramatic.
Generally,eastern waters have warmed faster than those to the west,with the Tasman Sea one of the fastest warming areas. Marine heatwaves have doubled in frequency and are becoming more intense due to human-caused climate change,according to the IPCC.
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