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Alert Diver is the dive industry’s leading publication. Featuring DAN’s core content of dive safety, research, education and medical information, each issue is a must-read reference, archived and shared by passionate scuba enthusiasts. In addition, Alert Diver showcases fascinating dive destinations and marine environmental topics through images from the world’s greatest underwater photographers and stories from the most experienced and eloquent dive journalists in the business.

Alert Diver is the dive industry’s leading publication. Featuring DAN’s core content of dive safety, research, education and medical information, each issue is a must-read reference, archived and shared by passionate scuba enthusiasts. In addition, Alert Diver showcases fascinating dive destinations and marine environmental topics through images from the world’s greatest underwater photographers and stories from the most experienced and eloquent dive journalists in the business.

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Corals bleach, or turn white, when their<br />

symbiotic algae (zooxanthellae) are<br />

expelled from the corals’ tissues due to<br />

stressors such as excessively warm water.<br />

Bleached corals can and do recover<br />

when favorable conditions resume.<br />

STEPHEN FRINK<br />

and November 2016 to determine how much of the<br />

bleached coral survived. Data published by the Coral<br />

CoE included the following:<br />

• The entire reef system was not affected by the recent<br />

bleaching event. The GBR is 1,430 miles long, and its<br />

southern portion is much farther away from the<br />

equator than its northern portion. The bottom twothirds<br />

of the reef suffered minimal to no mortality.<br />

The majority of the impact is in the northern third of<br />

the reef, a region that spans approximately 600 miles<br />

from Port Douglas to Papua New Guinea. This region<br />

is not commonly visited by recreational dive boats.<br />

Even within the northern region the overall effects<br />

of the bleaching event varied. The inshore northern<br />

section, where the water is shallower, felt the brunt<br />

of the 2016 event.<br />

• March-April 2016 data showed the following<br />

amounts of severe bleaching in the GBR:<br />

— 81 percent in the northern section (north of Port Douglas)<br />

— 33 percent in the central section (Mackay north to<br />

Port Douglas)<br />

— 1 percent in the southern section (south of Mackay)<br />

• October-November 2016 data showed the following<br />

amounts of coral mortality in the GBR:<br />

— 26 percent in the far north (offshore)<br />

— 67 percent in the north<br />

— 6 percent in the central section<br />

— 1 percent in the south<br />

WHAT IS BLEACHED CORAL?<br />

Bleached coral is not dead coral. The bleaching data<br />

from the March-April 2016 surveys differ from the<br />

ALERTDIVER.COM | 103

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