Canberra, Mar. 15: A "mass bleaching event" is unfolding on Australia's famed Great Barrier Reef, authorities said Friday, as warming seas threaten the spectacular home to thousands of marine species.
Often dubbed the world's largest living structure, the Great Barrier Reef is a 2,300 kilometre (1,400 mile) expanse of tropical corals that house a stunning array of biodiversity.
But repeated mass bleaching events have threatened to rob the tourist drawcard of its wonder, turning banks of once-vibrant corals into a sickly shade of white.
"We know the biggest threat to coral reefs worldwide is climate change. The Great Barrier Reef is no exception," Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek said in a statement.
"We need to act on climate change. We need to protect our special places and the plants and animals that call them home."
Australia's Great Barrier Reef
The damaging mass bleaching event -- the seventh since 1998 -- was confirmed by government scientists following aerial surveys of 300 shallow reefs.
The Australian Reef Authority said it would now need to conduct further surveys to assess the severity and extent of bleaching.
Coral bleaching occurs when underwater temperatures are more than 1 degree warmer than the long-term average.
As corals come under heat stress, they expel algae living within their tissues -- draining them of their vibrant colours.
Ocean temperatures along the Great Barrier Reef have approached record levels in the past few weeks, according to official monitoring.
Richard Leck, head of oceans at World Wildlife Fund Australia, said it was likely that masses of coral would die if ocean temperatures did not cool rapidly in the coming weeks.
"This bleaching event is unfolding in an area where corals have not been previously exposed to these extreme temperatures," he said.
Leck said climate change was "putting tremendous pressure" on the Great Barrier Reef.
The current bleaching event followed similar setbacks in the Northern Hemisphere last year, Leck added, which caused major coral mortality in Florida and the Caribbean.
Some species of bleached coral have proven remarkably resilient and can recover if ocean temperatures cool.
But professor Terry Hughes, one of Australia's foremost coral reef scientists, said bleaching events were now happening so frequently that reefs were struggling to recover.
"The reef is no longer capable of recovering to the mix of coral species and the sizes of corals that were there 20 years ago," he told AFP.