The world has more coral reefs than first thought

A satellite photo from the Allen Coral Atlas showing a shallow coral reef off Exmouth, Western Australia
A satellite photo from the Allen Coral Atlas showing a shallow coral reef off Exmouth, Western Australia

Research led by Australia’s University of Queensland has shown there is more coral reef area across the globe than previously thought, according to a detailed satellite mapping contribution to the Allen Coral Atlas Project.

Dr Mitchell Lyons from UQ’s School of the Environment, working as part of the Allen Coral Atlas project, said scientists have now identified 348,000 square kilometres of shallow coral reefs, up to 20-30 metres deep.

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‘This revises up our previous estimate of shallow reefs in the world’s oceans,’ said Dr Lyons. ‘Importantly, the high-resolution, up-to-date mapping satellite technology also allows us to see what these habitats are made from.

‘We’ve found 80,000 square kilometres of reef have a hard bottom, where coral tends to grow, as opposed to soft bottom like sand, rubble or seagrass,’ he added. ‘This data will allow scientists, conservationists, and policymakers to better understand and manage reef systems.

A satellite photo from the Allen Coral Atlas showing shallow coral reefs off Fiji
A satellite photo from the Allen Coral Atlas showing shallow coral reefs off Fiji (Photo: supplied)

More than 1.5 million samples and 100 trillion pixels from the Sentinel-2 and Planet Dove CubeSat satellites were used to capture fine-scale detail on a high-resolution global map.

‘This is the first accurate depiction of the distribution and composition of the world’s coral reefs, with clear and consistent terminology,’ said Dr Lyons. ‘It’s more than just a map – it’s a tool for positive change for reefs and coastal and marine environments at large.’

UQ’s Associate Professor Chris Roelfsema said the reef mapping project, a collaboration with more than 480 contributors, is already being used in coral reef conservation around the world.

Screenshot of the Allen Coral Atlas website (Photo: supplied)

‘The maps and associated data are publicly accessible through the Allen Coral Atlas and Google Earth Engine, reaching a global audience,’ said Dr Roelfsema. ‘They’re being used to inform projects in Australia, Indonesia, the Timor and Arafura Seas, Fiji, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Vanuatu, Panama, Belize, Bangladesh, India, Maldives, Sri Lanka, Kenya and western Micronesia.’

The Allen Coral Atlas was conceived and funded by the late co-founder of Microsoft, Paul Allen’s Vulcan Inc, and is managed by Arizona State University along with partners from Planet, the Coral Reef Alliance and The University of Queensland.

The research paper is published in Cell Reports Sustainability. 

Filed under: Briefing
Tagged with: Australia, Coral Reefs, Great Barrier Reef, Marine Science


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