Mass bleaching event on Great Barrier Reef damaged deeper corals

Highlights
- The researchers found bleached coral colonies down to depths of 131 feet beneath the ocean's surface.
- The Great Barrier Reef is known to harbour extensive areas of deep coral reefs that are notoriously difficult to study.
- A team of divers conducted surveys during the height of bleaching across a number of sites on the northern Great Barrier Reef.
Although deep reefs are often considered a refuge from thermal anomalies, the research, published in the journal Nature Communications, highlights limitations to this role and argues that both shallow and deep reefs are under threat of mass bleaching events.
"During the bleaching event, cold-water upwelling initially provided cooler conditions on the deep reef," said Pim Bongaerts, from the California Academy of Sciences in the US.
"However, when this upwelling stopped towards the end of summer, temperatures rose to record-high levels even at depth," said Bongaerts.
The researchers found bleached coral colonies down to depths of 131 feet beneath the ocean's surface.
The Great Barrier Reef is known to harbour extensive areas of deep coral reefs that are notoriously difficult to study.
Using remotely operated vehicles (ROVs), the team deployed sensors to 328 feet beneath the ocean's surface to characterise how temperature conditions at depth differ from those in shallow habitats.
A team of divers then conducted surveys during the height of bleaching across a number of sites on the northern Great Barrier Reef.
"Unfortunately, this research further stresses the vulnerability of the Great Barrier Reef," said Ove Hoegh-Guldberg from The University of Queensland in Australia.
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