Coral Reefs Defy Climate Alarmists

By Paul Homewood

More evidence that the Great Barrier Reef scare was fake:

Scientists studying the southern edge of the Great Barrier Reef report remarkable recent growth in coral. The findings defy alarmist predictions of doom and gloom after a cyclone damaged the reef and warming temperatures followed.

Australian researchers conducted a four-year study off One Tree Island, which is one of the southernmost locations of the Great Barrier Reef. Scientists considered this portion of the reef in decline since the 1970s. According to the Brisbane Times, scientists expected a 2009 cyclone that hit the area would be the final knockout blow for the reef. Instead, scientists conducting a four-year study of the reef from 2014 through 2017 found remarkable growth and recovery.

Kay Davis, one of the study’s researchers, told the Brisbane Times that she expected warming temperatures and ocean acidification, caused by global warming, to be the final death blow for the reef.

“The ocean is warming and acidifying so we wouldn’t think the coral would be able to fight that,” said Davis.

To her surprise, her research showed the reef’s calcification, a measure of coral growth, increased 400 percent during the four years of her study.

“One Tree Island is a special case because it was given that time it remained relatively isolated from humans and human impact, apart from the global impact of climate change,” said Davis in the Times.

The whole idea was always absurd, that sea temperatures are now so much hotter than they were in the past, when corals have flourished during massive swings in climate.

And of course this latest study backs up what Peter Ridd and other independent experts have been saying for some time.