- Migrants crossing Channel to UK in 2024 soar by 25 percent
- Power restored to most of Puerto Rico: utility
- Seko Fofana joins Rennes after Saudi Arabia stint
- Israel threatens to step up Gaza strikes
- Brazil's Amazon saw highest number of fires in 17 years: agency
- McGregor wants no let-up as Celtic aim to maintain Old Firm grip
- Truck ramming kills 10 New Year's revelers in New Orleans, injures dozens
- Ten dead as man drives truck into New Year crowd in New Orleans
- Gaza rescuers say 15 killed in Israeli New Year strike
- Rugby chief backs 'trailblazer' Maher to fuel Women's World Cup fever
- Right-wing YouTubers back South Korea president's last stand
- Championship side Stoke appoint Robins as new manager
- Bangladesh saw surge of mob killings in 2024: rights groups
- Zverev injured as holders Germany crash at United Cup
- Moscow, Kyiv end Russian gas transit to Europe via Ukraine
- South Korea to send Jeju Air crash black box to US
- Carter's Middle East peace legacy survives, but mostly in name
- South Korea investigators vow to execute Yoon arrest warrant
- Navarro stunned by wildcard as Djokovic-Kyrgios doubles run ends
- South Korea says will send Jeju Air crash black box to US
- Zverev injured as Germany crash at United Cup
- Navarro stunned by wildcard as Dimitrov cruises in Brisbane
- Tintin, Popeye, Hemingway among US copyrights expiring in 2025
- Cavs top Lakers in LeBron's first game at 40, Celtics crush Raptors
- Finnish police probing seven sailors over cut cables
- Canada's Dabrowski reveals cancer treatment amid run to Olympic bronze
- Milan says no to all outdoor smoking in Italy's toughest ban
- Zverev out of United Cup with injury as Australian Open looms
- FBI makes its largest bomb bust on Virginia farm
- Rain break helps Osaka overcome nerves to reach Auckland quarters
- Ex-India coach Shastri wants two-tier Test system after MCG blockbuster
- New year hope and joy reign in a Damascus freed from Assad
- End of Russian gas via Ukraine sparks unease in eastern Europe
- Zelensky vows Ukraine will do everything in 2025 to stop Russia
- Island-wide blackout hits Puerto Rico on New Year's Eve
- Serbia enters New Year with student protests over train station tragedy
- Romania, Bulgaria join borderless Schengen zone
- US Capitol riot fugitive seeks asylum in Canada
- Musk flummoxes internet with 'Kekius Maximus' persona
- US stocks slip as European markets ring out year with gains
- Olmo's Barcelona future in air over registration race
- Venezuela opposition urges protests against Maduro's inauguration
- Syria's de facto leader meets minority Christians
- Suriname ex-dictator Bouterse to be cremated on Saturday
- £1.5 mn reward offered after 'brazen' London gem raid
- Zimbabwe abolishes the death penalty
- Barcelona race against clock to register Olmo
- Arteta wants Arsenal to hammer away in title race
- Panama marks canal handover anniversary in shadow of Trump threat
- Gaza hospital chief held by Israel becomes face of crumbling healthcare
Australia's Great Barrier Reef hit by record bleaching
Australia's spectacular Great Barrier Reef is experiencing its worst bleaching event on record, the country's reef authority reported on Wednesday.
Often dubbed the world's largest living structure, the Great Barrier Reef is a 2,300-kilometre (1,400-mile) long expanse, home to a stunning array of biodiversity including more than 600 types of coral and 1,625 fish species.
But aerial surveys conducted by the scientists show about 730 out of more than 1,000 reefs spanning the Great Barrier Reef have bleached, the authority said.
"The cumulative impacts experienced across the reef this summer have been higher than previous summers," the federally funded Marine Park Authority said in a statement.
This event is the fifth mass bleaching on the reef in the past eight years.
Bleaching occurs when coral expel microscopic algae, known as zooxanthellae, to survive. If high temperatures persist, the coral can eventually turn white and die.
The Reef Authority’s chief scientist Roger Beeden said climate change posed the biggest threat to reefs globally.
"The Great Barrier Reef is an incredible ecosystem, and while it has shown its resilience time and time again, this summer has been particularly challenging," he said.
- Recovery in doubt -
AFP journalists visited one of the worst-impacted areas of the Great Barrier Reef this month.
Lizard Island, a small slice of tropical paradise off Australia's northeast tip that is usually teaming with vibrant coral life, resembled a watery grave.
Marine biologist Anne Hoggett, who has lived and worked on Lizard Island for 33 years, said when she first arrived, coral bleaching only occurred every decade or so.
Now, it is happening every year, she said, with about 80 percent of vulnerable Acropora corals on the Lizard Island reef suffering bleaching this summer.
"We don't know yet if they've already sustained too much damage to recover or not," Hoggett told AFP.
Australia has invested about Aus$5 billion ($3.2 billion) into improving water quality, reducing the effects of climate change, and protecting threatened species.
The country is one of the world's largest gas and coal exporters and has only recently set targets to become carbon neutral.
Whether these efforts will be enough for the reef to keep its World Heritage Status will be examined by UNESCO later this year.
B.Finley--AMWN