Vanillalite
Ask me about the GAF Notebook
NPR
We've seem to have passed the point of no return on some of this due to climate change at a much faster rate than anyone could ever predicted.
In the past 18 months, Edmondson has watched as two-thirds of the coral along this 400-mile northern stretch of the Great Barrier Reef has turned white and died. Rising ocean temperatures have caused the single greatest loss of coral ever recorded along the reef.
"I did not expect to see a loss of corals to this extent in my lifetime. This has come sooner than we had hoped," says Terry Hughes, director of the Coral Reef Center at James Cook University in Townsville, along the midsection of the reef.
"Close to half of the corals on the Great Barrier Reef have died in a period of about 18 months," Hughes says. "This is the new normal."
We've seem to have passed the point of no return on some of this due to climate change at a much faster rate than anyone could ever predicted.