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dc.coverage.spatialGreat Barrier Reefen
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-05T08:21:15Z
dc.date.available2026-01-05T08:21:15Z
dc.date.issued2025-12-13
dc.identifier.citationGreat Barrier Reef study: Global impact of rare coral-killing disease. (2025, December 13). The Manila Times, p. C1.en
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12174/17127
dc.descriptionUniversity of Sydney marine biologists have identified a devastating combination of coral bleaching and a rare necrotic wasting disease that wiped out large, long-lived corals on the Great Barrier Reef during the record 2024 marine heat wave. Their study, published on Dec. 10 in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, also sends an urgent warning at the global level: “The current trajectory of climate change is progressing too quickly for corals to adjust,” the authors wrote. “Coral reefs are in danger, with recurrent anomalous heat waves and mass coral bleaching being the greatest threat to their survival.”en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherThe Manila Times Publishing Corporationen
dc.titleGreat Barrier Reef study: Global impact of rare coral-killing diseaseen
dc.typenewspaperArticleen
dc.citation.journaltitleThe Manila Timesen
dc.citation.firstpageC1en
local.subject.classificationMT20251213_C1en
local.subject.personalnameByrne, Maria
local.subject.personalnameHorizon, Sydney
local.subject.scientificnameGonioporaen
dc.subject.agrovoccoral reefsen
dc.subject.agrovoccoral bleachingen
dc.subject.agrovocheatwavesen
dc.subject.agrovocclimate changeen
dc.subject.agrovocEl Niñoen


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