NYOMAN Sugiarto has been working for 16 years to preserve coral on the reefs of Bali, but the frequency of mass coral bleachings he says is now devastating.
Ninety per cent of the corals Nyoman had nurtured on the reefs near his village in Bondalem, in northern shore of Bali, lost their colour last December.
“It was all white. We were shocked. Of course, it also negatively affected the coral we planted. It’s not just the natural ones,” the 51-year-old conservationist said.
When Nyoman began coral conservation projects in 2008, he was told that coral could retain the living algae, which gives it colour for 10 to 20 years.
Yet, the coral reefs off Bondalem were bleached in less than 10 years, he says, blaming warmer sea temperatures triggered by climate change.
Coral bleaching occurs when coral expels the colourful algae living in its tissues. Without the algae, the coral becomes pale and vulnerable to starvation, disease or death.
In April, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said more than 54% of the reef areas in the world’s oceans are experiencing bleaching-level heat stress, the fourth global bleaching event in the last three decades.
Indonesia has roughly 5.1 million hectares of coral reefs and accounts for 18% of the world’s total, data from the country’s tourism ministry showed.
Coral bleaching in Bali in late 2023 was mainly caused by rising sea temperatures caused by the El Nino phenomenon that hit Indonesia, said Marthen Welly, a marine conservation adviser at the Coral Triangle Centre.
Indonesia experienced the most severe dry season last year since 2019 due to the El Nino.
While Indonesia’s corals are more resilient and tend to recover faster, Marthen said it will not be enough to withstand the rising ocean temperature.
“It’s predicted that the coral bleaching will occur more often, between one or two years with the current temperature,” he said. — Reuters