South Africa has beautiful coral reefs with high fish and coral diversity situated along the Maputaland coast. Although bleaching has occurred on our reefs with 13% of corals affected, this is considerably less than other parts of the world like the Great Barrier where up to 80% of their corals on certain reefs have suffered bleaching.
South Africa’s reefs are subtropical so the sea temperatures aren’t as high as tropical reefs and our reefs are also deeper, which has largely protected them from severe bleaching.
Corals are tiny animals that live in colonies that form coral reefs. These coral reefs are critically important to humans because not only do they provide shelter to 25% of all known marine species, they protect shorelines from oceanic waves and erosion, and they represent the medicine chests of the sea and generate millions through tourism annually.
Tiny algae provide corals with 90% of their nutritional needs but, when sea temperatures are too high, the symbiotic relationship between the coral and algae breaks down and the algae are ejected by the coral, leaving the corals ghostly white and literally starving.
Corals may recover if the temperature stress is short-lived, but they will die if it is prolonged. The loss of coral reefs has huge implications for the ocean and human health. Let’s all do what we can to remain conscious of our environmental footprints and live with the ocean in mind.
Because humans tend to be forgetful, it is recommended setting up reminders to make changes to reduce our personal impact on climate change.
1. Don’t overfill the kettle – what you don’t use will only go cold again
2. Turn off appliances before going to sleep at night
3. Make meat a treat – the meat industry contributes 18% of global greenhouse gas emissions
4. Walk more – people don’t emit pollution when they walk
5. Take short sharp showers – (every minute in the shower uses 10 litres of water)

