Cyclone Debbie: Experts fear damage to Great Barrier Reef

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A boat (C) ran aground on Hamilton Island after strong Cyclone Debbie hit the Whitsundays Islands in Queensland on March 29, 2017Image source, AFP
Image caption,
Boats have been swept ashore in the Whitsunday Islands

Cyclone Debbie is likely to have damaged Australia's already beleaguered Great Barrier Reef, experts have said.

The cyclone struck the Queensland coast as a category four storm, carrying winds of up to 263km/h (163 mph).

Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said some damage on land was not as widespread as first anticipated.

Marine experts said they expected to find damage to the reef's ecosystem, although it would not rival widespread destruction caused by coral bleaching.

The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority said it had not yet been able to assess potential damage caused by the storm.

But the authority's director, Dr David Wachenfeld, said he feared the cyclone's impact because it had been large, intense and slow-moving.

"Those three things together tend to be the characteristics of a cyclone that causes relatively high damage to the ecosystems of the Great Barrier Reef," he told the BBC.

Although cyclones are normal in the area, the effects of climate change are believed to be increasing the frequency of severe cyclones, he said.

"This is really testing the resilience of the Great Barrier Reef ecosystem."

Flooding fears

Marine ecologist Dr Joshua Madin, from Macquarie University, said although the cyclone's damage would be "patchy", it was still cause for concern.

"It's likely to have caused a lot of damage," he said.

"You start to see a lot of grow-back after 10 to 15 years, but some of these coral are hundreds of years old."

However, Dr Madin agreed with another reef expert, marine ecologist Professor Terry Hughes, that mass bleaching remained the reef's primary concern.

"The path of a cyclone is about 100km wide so it will have had an impact locally on the reefs that is passed over," Prof Hughes said.

"The bleaching event is much larger in scale."

The experts said cyclones could also have a positive effect by cooling water down, although this might be negligible.

"It will cool the water temperature down by a degree or so but it's not going to rescue bleached coral," Prof Hughes said.

Image source, ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
Image caption,
Warmer waters in 2016 led to the worst destruction of coral ever recorded on the Great Barrier Reef

Towns remained cut off on Wednesday after being pummelled by the powerful cyclone. Yachts were washed ashore and roofs torn off houses.

Debbie has since been downgraded to a tropical low system but Australia's Bureau of Meteorology has still warned of strong wind gusts and heavy rain.

"This rainfall is likely to lead to major river flooding over a broad area this week," it said.

The bureau said that some areas had been drenched with the equivalent of half a year's worth of rain - "a phenomenal" 1,000mm (39 inches) - in just 48 hours.

Media caption,

Footage shows 'monster' cyclone hitting

Ms Palaszczuk, who flew to Bowen, one of the worst-hit towns, said mass evacuations helped save lives.

"Thankfully the extent of the damage here is not as widespread as we first anticipated, but of course there are lots of trees down... we've seen the impact of roofs being blown off people's houses," she said.

Image source, ABC/Jonathan Hair
Image caption,
A yacht stranded at Airlie Beach

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has activated a disaster response plan.

Three people had been confirmed injured, but that number could rise, Ms Palaszczuk said.

She urged insurance companies to "treat people with respect" following the disaster, saying 63,000 homes were without power.

The premier also expressed concerns that injured people were unable to contact emergency services.

The next phase - BBC's Hywel Griffith, Ayr

The troops have arrived, the helicopters are overhead and Queensland has swung into full recovery mode.

At Ayr Fire Station, I spoke to two emergency workers who were packing up their kits and waiting to be deployed. They expect to be airlifted to one of the remote towns cut off by the storm.

When they get there, they'll knock on doors and check on people - provided of course that the doors have not blown away.

Another fireman explained how he was itching to get out and help, even if just to give a comforting hug to someone who might be shell-shocked by the cyclone.

Even in a massive emergency operation like this, it is those small gestures that make a difference.

Reporting by the BBC's Greg Dunlop

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