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posted by janrinok on Tuesday May 15 2018, @01:25AM   Printer-friendly
from the what-not-to-do dept.

After huge amounts of coral bleaching and rising carbon emissions, the Great Barrier Reef could really use some good news. Sadly, that's not what it got this weekend.

A draft report from the Department of Environment and Energy recommends forest clearing should go ahead at northern Queensland's Kingvale Station, according to the Sydney Morning Herald. Prospective clearing was first authorised in 2014, and its purpose would be to make way for cropping and other activities.

Environment Minister Josh Frydenberg will rule on the matter, and if it goes forward it'll mean 2,000 hectares of forest areas right next to the Reef will be cleared. And that would almost certainly mean a soil pollution problem for the Reef.

[...] Not only is too much heat and light a problem, so is lack of sunlight. Sediment washed from the land into the Reef blocks sunlight onto the coral, restricting the necessary process of photosynthesis. It can also damage or kill some of the fauna supporting the ecosystem.

"Declining marine water quality, influenced by land-based run-off, is one of the most significant threats to the long-term health and resilience of the Great Barrier Reef." Ironically, that's a quote from the Queensland Government's State of the Environment page.


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  • (Score: 2) by MichaelDavidCrawford on Tuesday May 15 2018, @06:30AM

    The once-abundant Grand Banks cod-fishing region had so many cod because the ice ages scraped all the topsoil off of Newfoundland.

    It is said that there were once so many cod that you could walk on top of them without sinking into the ocean.

    Overfishing led to a cod fishing moratorium in Canada - but the Portuguese continued to catch cod throughout the moratorium.

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