Scientists and Indigenous Australians are collecting coral spawn at night to bolster the Great Barrier Reef amid rising threats from climate change. The Reef Restoration and Adaptation Program, funded with nearly $300 million, employs innovative techniques like coral IVF to help the ecosystem adapt to warming oceans. Despite these efforts, experts emphasize that reducing global emissions remains essential for long-term survival.
On a cloudy December night off northern Queensland, marine scientist Peter Harrison leaned over a boat's edge, detecting the faint smell of coral spawn in the dark waters. This scent signaled the start of the Great Barrier Reef's annual mass spawning event, where millions of corals release pearly bundles of sperm and eggs shortly after the full moon. Harrison, from Southern Cross University, joined scientists, tourism operators, and Indigenous Australians to collect hundreds of thousands of eggs using modified nets.
The Great Barrier Reef spans 133,000 square miles and comprises about 3,000 individual reefs, supporting over 1,600 fish species and fueling a $5.3 billion tourism industry. However, marine heatwaves have triggered six mass bleaching events in the past decade, with 2016 alone causing a 30 percent decline in coral cover. A recent study projects over 50 percent loss in coral cover within 15 years under all emissions scenarios.
Launched in 2018, the Reef Restoration and Adaptation Program (RRAP) coordinates over 300 experts across more than 20 institutions, including the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS). With $135 million from the government and $154 million from private sources, RRAP focuses on assisted reproduction. Teams skim spawn into anchored floating pools containing ceramic structures where larvae settle and grow. These heat-tolerant corals, bred from resilient parents, are then reseeded onto damaged areas.
At AIMS's National Sea Simulator in Townsville, autospawning tanks mimic reef conditions to produce embryos. Last year, SeaSim generated 19 million embryos across three species, contributing to RRAP's total of over 35 million. The program aims to deploy structures yielding 100 million one-year-old corals annually.
"The hopeful part is if we can take action now to help the system adapt," said coral ecologist Mia Hoogenboom of James Cook University. Yet, RRAP's executive director Cedric Robillot warns, "It all relies on the premise that the world will get its act together on emissions reductions." Critics note Australia's approval of fossil fuel projects, like the North West Shelf extension, which could emit 20 percent of the nation's annual carbon footprint. Indigenous voices, such as Gunggandji fisher Cindel Keyes, underscore the reef's cultural importance: "It's part of our life."
While restoration buys time, experts like Harrison, who has dived the reef for over 40 years, express "chronic ecological grief" over accelerating losses. Tourism operators often avoid climate discussions to maintain visitor appeal, missing chances to advocate for emissions cuts.