Scientist, mentor, posting on #ecology and #conservation, #environment, #climate change and #coral reefs. Australian-Irish. Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science.
https://scholar.google.com.au/citations?user=MhJ2LfsAAAAJ&hl=en ..
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Scientist, mentor, posting on #ecology and #conservation, #environment, #climate change and #coral reefs. Australian-Irish. Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science.
https://scholar.google.com.au/citations?user=MhJ2LfsAAAAJ&hl=en
Terence P. Hughes is a professor of marine biology at James Cook University in Queensland, Australia. He is known for research on the global coral bleaching event caused by climate change. Nature dubbed him "Reef sentinel" in 2016 for the global role he plays in applying multi-disciplinary science to securing reef sustainability. He is an Australian Research Council Laureate Fellow and Director of the Australian Research Council (ARC) Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies. His research interests encompass coral reef ecology, macroecology and evolution, as well as social-ecological interactions. His recent work has focused on marine ecology, macroecology, climate change, identifying safe planetary boundaries for human development, and on transformative governance of the sea in Australia, Chile, China, the Galapagos Islands, Gulf of Maine and the Coral Triangle. His career citations in Google Scholar exceed 88,000. .. more
“We shouldn’t give up on the world’s coral reefs…. But restoration is not the way to save them.
The way to save them is to deal with greenhouse gas emissions, & that, of course, is much, much harder.”
www.scientificamerican.com/article/eart...
The true death toll - silent and unseen - is billions of marine animals and plants.
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
Reposted by Terry P. Hughes
Reposted by Du Toit, Karen O’Leary
Reposted by Terry P. Hughes, A. E. Dessler, Wayne Dawson , and 13 more Terry P. Hughes, A. E. Dessler, Wayne Dawson, Gavin A. Schmidt, Anthony Ricciardi, Michael J. Allen, Efrén O. Pérez, Juan Cole, Aaron Sojourner, Tom van der Meer, Jesús Rodríguez Pomeda, Matthijs Rooduijn, Andrew Watkins, Federica Genovese, Karen O’Leary, Mariana C. Chiuffo
Reposted by Terry P. Hughes, Adrian Vickers
www.theguardian.com/australia-ne...
We knew by then that billions of corals were dead or dying due to extreme heat stress in Jan-March. www.theguardian.com/environment/...
The Australian government stayed silent for another 14 months, until after an election & more fossil fuel permits.
Reposted by Terry P. Hughes, Tim Stephens
This week, Ningaloo, another 🇦🇺 icon is experiencing catastrophic coral loss
These are national treasures. We must take strong action on climate to save them.
www.abc.net.au/news/2025-08...
Reposted by Terry P. Hughes, Libby Robin
It maps what the people & places we love stand to lose from climate change.
We should know this before the govt sets our 2035 emissions target
Release it now.
www.afr.com/policy/energ...
“Unprecedented Mass Bleaching and Loss of Coral across 12° of Latitude in Western Australia in 2010–11”. journals.plos.org/plosone/arti...
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
Picture shows a 500yr old bleached coral, clinging to life - off Heron island, April 2024.
Reposted by Christopher Wright
www.voanews.com/a/surveys-sh...
Reposted by Andrew Watkins
lsj.com.au/articles/the...
Reposted by Terry P. Hughes, Du Toit
thegreenconnection.org.za/wp-content/u...
And nobody actually noticed.
thenightly.com.au/politics/aar...
Reposted by Tiffany H. Morrison
Reposted by Terry P. Hughes, Robert C. Richards
lsj.com.au/articles/int...
Of course, ‘consideration’ actually means ‘dismissal’.
But how do you feed billions of surviving wild corals in an area the size of 70 million football fields?
2016, left - www.nature.com/articles/s41...
2024, right - theconversation.com/worlds-bigge...
Culling a few starfish won’t climate-proof coral reefs. factuel.afp.com/doc.afp.com....
Reposted by Terry P. Hughes
Here’s a comparison of coral mortality in the northern Great Barrier Reef in 2016 and 2024.
Reposted by Terry P. Hughes
Yes, the 2024 coral bleaching event on the Great Barrier Reef was terrible.
But it’s the cumulative impacts of recurring disasters that matters in the longer term.
www.smh.com.au/environment/...
Reposted by Terry P. Hughes
Water temperatures around Australia's Great Barrier Reef were the warmest they've been in over 400 years this year, according to new research.
Scientists say the reef is facing "catastrophic damage."
No time to waste. ActOnClimate