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From - Australian Institute of Marine Science

Introduction:
The current wave of hot weather in north Queensland has raised fears of massive coral bleaching on the Great Barrier Reef. Scientists are concerned that rising temperatures could produce a coral bleaching episode reminiscent of the 1998 crisis if relief from current temperatures does not occur. These concerns are being addressed this week by an elite international group of experts at a workshop on Magnetic Island, Queensland.

-Fears of massive coral bleaching 


From - Australian Institute of Marine Science

Introduction:
On October 11 a team of scientists from AIMS travelled from their tropical home in North Queensland to the Antarctic to begin a research project situated on the coldest, windiest and driest continent on earth. For three weeks the researchers donned dry suits and slipped into the chilly -2oC waters to examine Antarctic sponges. This was the first stage of a three-year project examining human impacts on the ecology of Antarctic sponge species. The project, being undertaken by AIMS in collaboration with the University of Canterbury, is the first of its kind to study human effects on Antarctic deep sea (benthic) communities using a multi-disciplinary approach and the first to examine the symbiotic relationship sponges have with Antarctic micro-organisms.

-Soaking up the Antarctic 


From - Australian Institute of Marine Science

Introduction:
For decades scientists have directly counted reef fish with SCUBA in depths to 30 metres, but the deeper fauna has been invisible -- and surveys there have been subject to the selectivity inherent in trawl, trap and handline fishing techniques. Meanwhile, the image quality of underwater television and video has increased markedly, and costs and size have decreased to such an extent that underwater video is now an integral tool of marine research.

-Baited video fleet yields diverse results in deep-water fish surveys 


From - CRC Reef Research Centre and Australian Institute of Marine Science

Introduction:
The impact of changes in water quality, as a result of changing land use run-off from the land, is arguably the single greatest environmental threat to the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area (Zann 1995). Debate surrounding the issue has often been ill-informed because of the complexity of the issues, the scattered state of relevant studies and the steady stream of new studies.

-Impacts of Terrestrial Run-off on the Great Barrier Reef  World Heritage Area 

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