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In this series,

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I have travelled the length and breadth of the Great Barrier Reef...

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..and used the latest techniques to watch its wildlife.

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But the reef has one more story to tell.

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The residents of this marine paradise

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have seen their habitat change rapidly within the last few decades.

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And time is running out for them.

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The Barrier Reef is facing one of the most serious challenges

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to its continued existence -

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the effect of human beings.

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But there is hope.

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This time, our research vessel, the Alucia,

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will be taking me to meet teams of scientists

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who are developing new ways to try and save it.

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And I'll be going to its deepest parts,

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where new discoveries are being made

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that might hold clues to its survival.

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Nobody has ever dived as deep as this before

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on the Great Barrier Reef.

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This is one of the greatest and most important ecosystems on the planet -

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and what happens here affects us all.

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So, what does the future hold for this complex wonder?

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I'm travelling along Australia's north east coast

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to look at one of the greatest

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and most splendid natural treasures that the world possesses -

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a chain of tropical islands and coral reefs

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that lies between the coast and the open ocean.

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I will never forget the first time I came here.

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YOUNGER DAVID: 'And what a world this was -

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'beneath me lay an endless landscape of coral,

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'of every conceivable colour and shape.'

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It was unimaginable then to think that we might ever lose the reef.

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But now, I've returned, and I can see that the reef is changing.

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In the last 30 years, almost half the coral has disappeared.

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The greatest concern now is that we might lose the reef altogether.

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Parts of the Great Barrier Reef still remain a mystery.

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Its immense size and remote depths

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make it extremely difficult to explore.

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But today, exciting new technology has made it possible

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to survey the entire reef from top to bottom.

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And that is revealing extraordinary things

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about the way in which the reef itself has evolved over time.

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By looking into the reef's past,

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we may discover something about its future.

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So, I'm meeting marine geologist Dr Robin Beaman.

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'He is on board the Alucia

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'and shows me some of his remarkable discoveries.'

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This is a depth model of the Great Barrier Reef -

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of the entire Great Barrier Reef.

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And there's a whole lot of different tools we use,

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the main one being multibeam echosounders,

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so it gives you a scan of the seafloor

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and we can actually map great areas of the continental shelf.

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This white part is land?

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That's right.

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So, everything that's coloured rainbow colours is under water.

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'By combining computer modelling and deep sea surveying,

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'Beaman has discovered new evidence

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'that the reef has already experienced great changes.'

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As a scientist - as geological scientists -

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we're trying to understand how the Great Barrier Reef

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has responded to changes in the past

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and there are clues there as to what the Great Barrier Reef has done,

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so if I zoom back, you can see, geologically,

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it's gone through some dramatic changes.

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Beaman's scans showed traces of an ancient reef

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that thrived over the last half million years

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and is now hidden along the edge of this great drop-off.

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This earlier reef existed long before the one we know today.

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It lay up to 70 metres deep

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and stretched nearly unbroken for more than 500 miles.

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It's been described as the world's largest fossil.

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This is what the older Great Barrier Reef looked like.

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And we call these "drowned reefs" -

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they're drowned in the sense that the water over them is so deep

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that the reef no longer grows.

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These ancient reefs were drowned by dramatic climate changes

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that caused sea levels to rise.

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This last happened less than 14,000 years ago.

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So, water released from the melting icecaps

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- is going to start flooding across here, is it? 
- That's right.

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The sea level was high enough to actually inundate

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and cover these old limestone hills

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and created the Great Barrier Reef that we know today.

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So, the changes that we're seeing going on now

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are nothing new, in terms of change.

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I mean, the Barrier Reef has always been changing.

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We do find it's quite robust.

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It has actually reformed,

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despite these catastrophic changes that have occurred.

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It's been exposed and flooded at least four times that we know of.

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To us, it's astounding.

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This new insight into the ancient history of the reef

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shows that, given enough time, it can regenerate.

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It seems that if seawater is clear and warm,

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simple organisms will eventually evolve

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that can build limestone homes to protect themselves

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from the waves and their enemies.

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But most of these events started long before human beings appeared on Earth

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and took many thousands of years to complete.

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We now know the reef has dwindled and recovered

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many times in its long history,

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but it also has to withstand a major change every 24 hours,

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as the tide retreats and comes back.

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At low tide, the water drains away very quickly,

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leaving the topmost community of creatures dangerously exposed.

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Some are washed out with the tide.

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Others swim to safety.

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But the coral polyps can't move.

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Temperatures on the surface of the reef

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can now reach a scorching 30 degrees centigrade.

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The exposed corals could easily dry out

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and be damaged by intense ultraviolet rays.

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But corals have ways of protecting themselves.

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When exposed to air, they produce huge amounts of mucus,

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which keeps them wet and acts like a sunscreen.

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This remarkable slime actually increases its UV resistance,

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becoming stronger if the temperatures soar.

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So, the coral manages to survive for the few hours that it's out of water.

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But there's one fish that manages to turn this exposure to its advantage.

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The epaulette shark remains on the reef even when the tide goes out.

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Of course, with so little water,

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it doesn't get as much oxygen as it requires normally,

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but it deals with that possibility by shutting off a part of its brain

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and so, reducing its oxygen demands.

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As the retreating tide exposes the topmost branches of the corals,

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the shark remains in the little pools between them for as long as it can.

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And then, it sets off to try and find food -

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shrimps, crabs and small worms that live on the reef.

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And it does that by exploiting another talent it has.

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It can, in effect, walk.

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It may be slow-going, but the little shark manages to make its way

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between the rocky pools to look for prey that may be imprisoned in them.

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It has the run of the place,

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until the tide returns once more to flood the reeftop.

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So, the inhabitants of the reef, each in its own way,

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deal with the daily hazards brought by exposure.

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But there is one catastrophe that can strike each year

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against which there is no defence.

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From November onwards,

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warm, moisture-laden winds from the northwest

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sweep down across these tropic seas

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and it's then that cyclones form.

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They are, in fact, the biggest killers of the reef's corals.

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But that doesn't mean that the corals are permanently destroyed.

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Their resilience once more comes apparent.

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And there's an extraordinary example of that

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in the most unlikely of places.

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This is the wreck of the SS Yongala.

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It was sunk by a cyclone in 1911.

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It lies 30 metres below the surface on a barren, sandy plain...

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..miles away from any natural coral reefs.

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By the time it was discovered, decades later,

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it had become an artificial reef...

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..and had been colonised by an extraordinary variety of life.

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It was an oasis in the featureless ocean.

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But in the century since it sank,

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the wreck has been hit repeatedly by more cyclones.

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The waters here are not deep

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so the turbulence created by a cyclone can reach the sea floor.

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THUNDERCLAP

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Cyclones travelling towards the coast

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can rip up hundreds of miles of coral.

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Captain Trevor Jackson, who has been diving on this wreck for decades,

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saw the devastating effects caused in 2011 by a category five cyclone.

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Cyclone Yahtzee, a massive system,

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crossed the coast just north of here.

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The cyclone was so large,

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it generated waves that exposed the top of the Yongala.

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THUNDERCLAP

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There was a lifting action...

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..and in the process,

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this scoured the top of the reef of all marine life.

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What was once a thriving ecosystem was now an almost bare skeleton.

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But amazingly, the reef on the Yongala

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began to repair itself within months.

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Green algae appeared on the wreck.

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Barnacles followed, allowing corals to get a grip.

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And soon, a new community had established itself.

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One of the things that makes the Yongala so unique

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is the way it rejuvenates itself after a major weather event.

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In the course of the last four or five years,

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about 80% of the reef has re-grown.

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The story of the Yongala shows that a coral reef can, remarkably,

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recover from natural disaster.

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And such recovery can be surprisingly quick

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when a reef is healthy and in balance.

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Most of the reef's inhabitants depend on one another for survival.

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But it is the coral that is the foundation of the reef

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and it plays a crucial role in many of the relationships.

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This is the crown-of-thorns starfish.

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For it, coral is food

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and it will eat relentlessly if not kept in check.

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But to other creatures, like the guard crab,

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coral is home.

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The crab is prepared to defend its patch

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from the carnivorous starfish at all costs.

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The crown-of-thorns, however,

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is much larger than most other starfish on the reef,

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so the tiny crab is forced to take a more stealthy approach.

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Hidden within the coral, it waits for its moment to attack.

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The starfish has left itself dangerously exposed,

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but the crab is cautious.

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When it can, the crab uses its powerful pincers

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to snip at the starfish's spines and tube-like feet...

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..before retreating back into the safety of the coral.

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The crab has won this battle.

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But recently, something has changed

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and the balance has been upset.

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The number of crown-of-thorns has increased dramatically

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and they've become a big problem on the reef.

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To find out more,

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the Alucia is taking me to a research station in the far north of the reef.

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It's situated on Lizard Island, where we can observe this problem up close.

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Lizard is surrounded by some of the most spectacular reefs

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on the entire barrier.

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But they are under attack from the coral-eating starfish.

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And at the island's research station,

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they've been studying why we might be seeing more of them than we used to.

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They have an extraordinary ability

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to suddenly increase vastly in numbers, like a plague.

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There have been three such plagues since the 1960s

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and, unfortunately,

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it seems as though we're in the middle, now, of a fourth.

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You might think that these plagues are just another natural disaster

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that the reef has had to withstand, like cyclones.

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There are reasons to suppose that, in fact,

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the plagues have been affected by human activity -

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either through an accumulation of run-off of fertilisers from the land

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that creates more food for the young starfish,

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or because we have overfished

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and so destroyed the natural balance of the reef.

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The starfish outbreaks have been responsible

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for over 40% of the coral loss of the last 30 years.

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It's just one of the huge changes here witnessed by Dr Charlie Veron.

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In 1972, Charlie was appointed

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the reef's first full-time coral scientist.

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He's gone on to become a world authority on coral

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and has identified a third of the world's known species.

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He was one of the first scientists to spend time in this underwater world

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and that was due to a particular piece of technology.

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What we knew about corals at the beginning of the scuba era

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was just almost nothing.

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So, scuba gear must have changed things radically.

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It changed everything.

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When you went down the face of a coral reef,

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you could see how corals fed, how they fought each other,

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how they reproduced and still,

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we're only just scratching the surface.

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Think of all the things that happen in a rainforest,

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how much we know about it.

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We haven't got a thousandth part of that information on the coral reef yet.

253
00:22:22,840 --> 00:22:25,160
'But since Charlie's first discoveries,

254
00:22:25,160 --> 00:22:27,760
'the reef has altered dramatically.'

255
00:22:27,760 --> 00:22:33,280
I've been going back to the same spots 10, 20, 30, 40 years ago

256
00:22:33,280 --> 00:22:36,000
and every time I go back,

257
00:22:36,000 --> 00:22:39,800
I'm sickened by some of the changes I've seen.

258
00:22:39,800 --> 00:22:42,240
Sometimes, I go back, I know it's the same spot

259
00:22:42,240 --> 00:22:43,960
and I can barely recognise it.

260
00:22:43,960 --> 00:22:46,240
Some species have been wiped out in the shallows now.

261
00:22:46,240 --> 00:22:48,480
It's already happened.

262
00:22:50,000 --> 00:22:54,320
What Charlie had witnessed were the effects of mankind upon the reef.

263
00:22:58,440 --> 00:23:03,520
When I myself first visited the Queensland coast almost 60 years ago,

264
00:23:03,520 --> 00:23:05,240
it was very different.

265
00:23:14,440 --> 00:23:17,600
Since then, like many coastlines around the world,

266
00:23:17,600 --> 00:23:20,480
there has been a massive increase in population

267
00:23:20,480 --> 00:23:22,880
and an explosion of industry.

268
00:23:37,560 --> 00:23:42,800
By 1975, the reef had been declared a National Marine Park.

269
00:23:42,800 --> 00:23:46,240
It was the biggest one of its kind in the world.

270
00:23:46,240 --> 00:23:49,760
But then, a new threat began to be recognised -

271
00:23:49,760 --> 00:23:53,480
not only to the reef, but to the world's oceans -

272
00:23:53,480 --> 00:23:54,960
climate change.

273
00:23:56,440 --> 00:24:00,000
THUNDERCLAPS

274
00:24:02,560 --> 00:24:06,400
There is more carbon dioxide in our atmosphere now

275
00:24:06,400 --> 00:24:09,600
than there has been in 800,000 years.

276
00:24:12,400 --> 00:24:15,560
Industrialised nations have been burning fossil fuels

277
00:24:15,560 --> 00:24:17,560
at an alarming rate.

278
00:24:19,320 --> 00:24:22,120
Global warming is slowly heating up our planet

279
00:24:22,120 --> 00:24:24,880
and threatens to cause huge problems for us all.

280
00:24:27,360 --> 00:24:32,800
Around 30% of the carbon dioxide we produce is absorbed by the ocean.

281
00:24:35,960 --> 00:24:39,200
As a result, we're seeing an increase in the temperature

282
00:24:39,200 --> 00:24:40,840
and acidity of our seas.

283
00:24:43,440 --> 00:24:46,720
Both are killing the inhabitants of the reef.

284
00:24:51,960 --> 00:24:54,160
But how quickly is it being damaged?

285
00:24:57,400 --> 00:25:02,320
To find out, I'm heading to meet Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg

286
00:25:02,320 --> 00:25:05,840
He's studying the effects of climate change on coral.

287
00:25:10,560 --> 00:25:12,720
Ove is based on Heron Island,

288
00:25:12,720 --> 00:25:16,080
near the southern end of the Great Barrier.

289
00:25:16,080 --> 00:25:20,360
Heron is a low, sandy island, 50 miles out from the mainland,

290
00:25:20,360 --> 00:25:22,000
right on the reef itself...

291
00:25:24,800 --> 00:25:28,040
..so its research station is very well-placed.

292
00:25:29,640 --> 00:25:32,320
Here, Ove is carrying out an experiment

293
00:25:32,320 --> 00:25:34,320
to see how the reef is going to cope.

294
00:25:35,440 --> 00:25:37,240
At the research station here,

295
00:25:37,240 --> 00:25:41,320
the experiment we're running is really climate change sped up.

296
00:25:42,440 --> 00:25:46,320
Because it's often hard for people to really get their heads around

297
00:25:46,320 --> 00:25:48,760
when you talk about global change over decades

298
00:25:48,760 --> 00:25:51,080
and what might happen to coral reefs.

299
00:25:51,080 --> 00:25:54,080
We have, essentially, in these experiments, sped things up

300
00:25:54,080 --> 00:25:56,400
so that you can literally, over a year,

301
00:25:56,400 --> 00:26:00,240
see the impacts of what might be occurring over the next hundred.

302
00:26:03,960 --> 00:26:07,200
Each of these tanks contains a miniature coral reef

303
00:26:07,200 --> 00:26:09,680
with the same species of coral.

304
00:26:09,680 --> 00:26:11,920
But each is being subjected to

305
00:26:11,920 --> 00:26:15,960
slightly different conditions of temperature and acidity -

306
00:26:15,960 --> 00:26:19,880
the two factors that are most likely to alter with climate change.

307
00:26:24,760 --> 00:26:29,040
Using these tanks, scientists have shown that increasing acidity

308
00:26:29,040 --> 00:26:32,720
restricts hard corals from building their limestone skeletons.

309
00:26:35,920 --> 00:26:37,840
And a rise in temperature -

310
00:26:37,840 --> 00:26:40,400
a single degree centigrade warmer than normal -

311
00:26:40,400 --> 00:26:42,960
can cause corals to become so stressed

312
00:26:42,960 --> 00:26:45,920
that they eject the photosynthesising algae

313
00:26:45,920 --> 00:26:48,640
that enable them to grow and give some colour.

314
00:26:53,840 --> 00:26:57,040
So they bleach, turning ghostly white.

315
00:27:07,400 --> 00:27:09,160
If you go back in time,

316
00:27:09,160 --> 00:27:13,920
you can see the big swings between ice ages and the warm periods

317
00:27:13,920 --> 00:27:16,360
where the Great Barrier Reef disappears and regrows

318
00:27:16,360 --> 00:27:18,960
and that's happened numerous times.

319
00:27:18,960 --> 00:27:21,120
So, we've always had changes,

320
00:27:21,120 --> 00:27:25,680
but we're talking about changes over 10,000 years, in those cases.

321
00:27:25,680 --> 00:27:29,840
But we're now seeing is the equivalent in a few decades.

322
00:27:29,840 --> 00:27:32,960
And that, of course, is stretching life's capacity to keep up.

323
00:27:39,480 --> 00:27:44,240
Organisms, ecosystems are falling behind as the world changes,

324
00:27:44,240 --> 00:27:47,800
faster than it has in this enormous amount of time.

325
00:27:53,040 --> 00:27:58,000
It's been shown here that a rise of just two degrees centigrade

326
00:27:58,000 --> 00:28:01,120
will turn a healthy reef into a decimated one.

327
00:28:02,440 --> 00:28:06,120
And such a rise will almost certainly happen in these seas

328
00:28:06,120 --> 00:28:09,040
if we continue to do what we are doing.

329
00:28:19,480 --> 00:28:21,800
As Ove's tests suggest,

330
00:28:21,800 --> 00:28:24,440
this man-made problem has reached the point

331
00:28:24,440 --> 00:28:26,880
where it needs a man-made solution.

332
00:28:31,000 --> 00:28:33,160
I'm returning to mainland Australia

333
00:28:33,160 --> 00:28:36,080
to meet the scientists who are approaching this problem

334
00:28:36,080 --> 00:28:37,920
in a radically new way.

335
00:28:39,960 --> 00:28:44,240
The Australian Institute of Marine Science, AIMS,

336
00:28:44,240 --> 00:28:47,760
is based in northeast Queensland, right on the coast.

337
00:28:51,000 --> 00:28:55,520
Here, pioneering research is pushing the boundaries of coral science.

338
00:29:00,800 --> 00:29:04,680
Over three million litres of filtered seawater

339
00:29:04,680 --> 00:29:07,360
are pumped through these tanks every day.

340
00:29:08,360 --> 00:29:11,800
So, it's possible for scientists to study the minute

341
00:29:11,800 --> 00:29:16,600
and often very complex changes that can affect coral's health.

342
00:29:20,280 --> 00:29:22,800
So, here, they're also conducting research

343
00:29:22,800 --> 00:29:25,200
to see whether it might not be possible

344
00:29:25,200 --> 00:29:29,480
to devise techniques of restoring damaged reefs back to health.

345
00:29:31,560 --> 00:29:35,800
In these tanks, they can simulate the exact conditions of the reef.

346
00:29:37,640 --> 00:29:40,560
They've been so successful that remarkably,

347
00:29:40,560 --> 00:29:44,320
the corals respond to the same astronomic and seasonal rhythms

348
00:29:44,320 --> 00:29:46,000
as those out in the ocean.

349
00:29:49,760 --> 00:29:53,800
And that is proving useful for one particular experiment.

350
00:29:56,280 --> 00:29:59,840
Corals are usually able to adapt to changing circumstances,

351
00:29:59,840 --> 00:30:01,160
given enough time.

352
00:30:05,920 --> 00:30:09,400
And that is partly due to the way they reproduce.

353
00:30:12,640 --> 00:30:14,800
After the first full moon in October,

354
00:30:14,800 --> 00:30:18,080
the great synchronised coral spawning event begins.

355
00:30:38,960 --> 00:30:42,480
It's a wonderful, annual rejuvenation.

356
00:30:48,920 --> 00:30:53,400
Hundreds of species release sperm and eggs into the ocean.

357
00:30:57,000 --> 00:31:01,080
Just as pollen from plants is blown far and wide by the wind,

358
00:31:01,080 --> 00:31:04,680
so coral spawn is swept away by the ocean currents.

359
00:31:07,560 --> 00:31:10,920
And at the same time, under the same moonlight,

360
00:31:10,920 --> 00:31:14,920
the corals will spawn here in the laboratory tanks.

361
00:31:19,160 --> 00:31:22,960
Using red light, so as not to disturb the process,

362
00:31:22,960 --> 00:31:25,480
scientists wait for the moment of release.

363
00:31:39,760 --> 00:31:41,360
And when it finally happens,

364
00:31:41,360 --> 00:31:44,600
they move fast to collect the sperm and the eggs.

365
00:31:49,280 --> 00:31:52,560
It's their one chance to get all the samples they need

366
00:31:52,560 --> 00:31:54,480
for a year's worth of research.

367
00:31:57,680 --> 00:32:00,560
But what exactly are they planning to do with them?

368
00:32:03,960 --> 00:32:08,560
Here, Dr Madeleine van Oppen has been selectively breeding them,

369
00:32:08,560 --> 00:32:13,120
using much the same techniques that we've used to produce crops on land

370
00:32:13,120 --> 00:32:16,320
that are resistant to drought and disease.

371
00:32:16,320 --> 00:32:18,840
It's the first time that selective breeding

372
00:32:18,840 --> 00:32:21,240
has been used in marine conservation.

373
00:32:25,280 --> 00:32:27,600
They release their sperm and eggs in bundles

374
00:32:27,600 --> 00:32:30,600
and those bundles float to the surface of the tank.

375
00:32:30,600 --> 00:32:34,360
We then agitate that to separate the eggs from the sperm.

376
00:32:37,360 --> 00:32:38,880
And we use that to set up

377
00:32:38,880 --> 00:32:41,960
our specific in vitro processes, basically.

378
00:32:45,840 --> 00:32:48,080
In the ocean, there is the potential

379
00:32:48,080 --> 00:32:51,280
for different species of coral to breed with each other.

380
00:32:52,480 --> 00:32:54,440
So, here, scientists wonder

381
00:32:54,440 --> 00:32:57,640
if you might be able to produce a new kind of coral

382
00:32:57,640 --> 00:33:01,320
that proves more successful in the changing waters of the reef.

383
00:33:03,000 --> 00:33:05,520
The problem that corals are facing now is that

384
00:33:05,520 --> 00:33:08,280
the change of the environment is extremely fast -

385
00:33:08,280 --> 00:33:10,080
much faster than ever recorded -

386
00:33:10,080 --> 00:33:12,360
so we need to help them a little bit in the lab.

387
00:33:12,360 --> 00:33:16,080
We need to speed up those natural processes of evolution.

388
00:33:18,400 --> 00:33:23,360
Van Oppen's aim is to use selective breeding to produce strains of coral

389
00:33:23,360 --> 00:33:27,240
that are able to withstand the worst effects of climate change...

390
00:33:29,560 --> 00:33:34,840
..and to use them to bring life back to worst-affected part of the reef.

391
00:33:37,120 --> 00:33:39,120
Maybe in five years or so,

392
00:33:39,120 --> 00:33:42,200
we will be allowed to place those corals

393
00:33:42,200 --> 00:33:45,320
onto a real reef, a disturbed reef -

394
00:33:45,320 --> 00:33:48,000
and test it and these selectively-bred corals

395
00:33:48,000 --> 00:33:50,680
will be able to restore that reef faster.

396
00:33:51,880 --> 00:33:55,040
And you have to realise, this is really a last resort option.

397
00:33:55,040 --> 00:33:58,800
We wouldn't want to do that if the reef is able to restore itself.

398
00:34:04,160 --> 00:34:08,000
But is there a chance that the reef, damaged by our activities,

399
00:34:08,000 --> 00:34:10,720
could restore itself without our help?

400
00:34:13,240 --> 00:34:15,640
Well, we now think that there may be clues

401
00:34:15,640 --> 00:34:18,680
in the reef's most distant and mysterious regions.

402
00:34:25,920 --> 00:34:28,560
There are still parts of the Great Barrier Reef

403
00:34:28,560 --> 00:34:31,200
that are virtually unexplored.

404
00:34:31,200 --> 00:34:35,480
But today, we have got remarkable new underwater vessels,

405
00:34:35,480 --> 00:34:38,400
like this submersible, that can take us to places

406
00:34:38,400 --> 00:34:42,800
where no unprotected human being could possibly go.

407
00:34:42,800 --> 00:34:47,040
What they will find down there, nobody knows.

408
00:34:47,040 --> 00:34:49,320
But I'm lucky enough to be one of those

409
00:34:49,320 --> 00:34:51,800
who's about to go down to find out.

410
00:34:54,360 --> 00:34:56,160
At the outer edge of the reef,

411
00:34:56,160 --> 00:35:01,440
the continental shelf plunges down over 2,000 metres to the seafloor.

412
00:35:05,800 --> 00:35:09,280
The Alucia has brought us over the edge of the drop-off,

413
00:35:09,280 --> 00:35:12,000
90 miles out into the Coral Sea...

414
00:35:15,360 --> 00:35:17,600
..out to Osprey Reef.

415
00:35:19,920 --> 00:35:23,960
Here at Osprey, this sheer vertical drop of the seafloor

416
00:35:23,960 --> 00:35:26,960
enables us to see corals at a variety of depths.

417
00:35:28,480 --> 00:35:31,440
Between 100 and 150 metres down,

418
00:35:31,440 --> 00:35:33,760
daylight is reduced to a glimmer.

419
00:35:33,760 --> 00:35:36,840
This is the mesophotic zone.

420
00:35:36,840 --> 00:35:40,280
Here, a mysterious community of corals is thriving,

421
00:35:40,280 --> 00:35:43,360
despite the damage being done to the reef above.

422
00:35:43,360 --> 00:35:46,240
The Great Barrier Reef, it's a marvel beyond marvels.

423
00:35:46,240 --> 00:35:51,480
It's a million species living in this symbiotic tangle,

424
00:35:51,480 --> 00:35:53,040
half of which we don't know.

425
00:35:53,040 --> 00:35:55,600
I mean, when you get to mesophotic depths,

426
00:35:55,600 --> 00:35:58,080
we know very few of the species down there.

427
00:35:58,080 --> 00:36:01,560
It literally is one of the last frontiers of biology,

428
00:36:01,560 --> 00:36:03,160
to understand this system.

429
00:36:06,520 --> 00:36:09,760
Scientists are now beginning to wonder if these corals

430
00:36:09,760 --> 00:36:14,000
might have the potential to restore the damaged parts of the reef.

431
00:36:15,280 --> 00:36:17,480
- RADIO: 
- '..Down about 100 metres...'

432
00:36:23,440 --> 00:36:25,400
Our state-of-the-art submersible

433
00:36:25,400 --> 00:36:29,280
is going to take me to see these deep corals for myself

434
00:36:29,280 --> 00:36:31,040
and even bring back a sample.

435
00:36:36,280 --> 00:36:38,320
Nadir in position.

436
00:36:38,320 --> 00:36:40,440
Are we clear to vent?

437
00:36:40,440 --> 00:36:43,360
You are clear to vent, clear to vent.

438
00:36:43,360 --> 00:36:45,000
Roger. Venting now.

439
00:36:57,360 --> 00:37:00,800
We are descending into the twilight zone.

440
00:37:07,840 --> 00:37:10,440
As we drop down the face of the reef,

441
00:37:10,440 --> 00:37:12,560
the light begins to dim.

442
00:37:21,040 --> 00:37:23,360
At about 100 metres,

443
00:37:23,360 --> 00:37:26,440
we enter the mesophotic zone.

444
00:37:26,440 --> 00:37:29,560
"Mesophotic" literally means "middle light".

445
00:37:32,040 --> 00:37:35,320
The corals here are beginning to look very different.

446
00:37:37,760 --> 00:37:40,360
Despite the apparent lack of light down here,

447
00:37:40,360 --> 00:37:44,000
there's still enough for some corals to photosynthesise,

448
00:37:44,000 --> 00:37:46,960
just like their relations closer to the surface.

449
00:37:46,960 --> 00:37:50,760
And to do that, they've formed these flat, broad plates

450
00:37:50,760 --> 00:37:53,200
to collect what little light there is.

451
00:37:57,800 --> 00:38:02,400
Mesophotic corals lie mostly out of reach of cyclones and bleaching.

452
00:38:04,800 --> 00:38:08,000
So, one of the big questions facing scientists is,

453
00:38:08,000 --> 00:38:13,200
could these deeper corals naturally repopulate the damaged reefs above?

454
00:38:24,440 --> 00:38:27,960
We've now passed beyond the mesophotic zone.

455
00:38:31,120 --> 00:38:33,640
The light begins to disappear completely

456
00:38:33,640 --> 00:38:36,240
and the reef changes again.

457
00:38:47,920 --> 00:38:50,960
Most of the light that filters down from above

458
00:38:50,960 --> 00:38:53,840
comes from the blue end of the spectrum,

459
00:38:53,840 --> 00:38:58,280
so the rock surface ahead of me looks very dull.

460
00:38:58,280 --> 00:39:01,560
But turn on the lights and it looks very different.

461
00:39:25,720 --> 00:39:27,720
Despite their remoteness,

462
00:39:27,720 --> 00:39:30,680
these strange relatives of reef-building corals

463
00:39:30,680 --> 00:39:33,080
are still part of the great reef system.

464
00:39:35,080 --> 00:39:38,960
To understand how they're connected, we need to study them closely.

465
00:39:41,080 --> 00:39:44,920
So, this seems an excellent place to collect a sample.

466
00:39:47,280 --> 00:39:51,800
But manoeuvring our eight-tonne submersible close to the rock face

467
00:39:51,800 --> 00:39:53,440
is a delicate operation.

468
00:40:12,400 --> 00:40:14,200
Oh, that's great.

469
00:40:22,800 --> 00:40:26,000
The chances are that this could well be a species

470
00:40:26,000 --> 00:40:28,000
that no-one has ever seen before.

471
00:40:31,440 --> 00:40:34,240
But things don't go quite to plan.

472
00:40:36,960 --> 00:40:39,720
- Oh, no! 
- We're going to have to go and fetch that.

473
00:40:52,680 --> 00:40:54,120
There it is.

474
00:41:08,120 --> 00:41:09,560
Oh, terrific!

475
00:41:14,160 --> 00:41:15,720
Success!

476
00:41:25,360 --> 00:41:28,560
As we descend past the 200 metre mark,

477
00:41:28,560 --> 00:41:32,200
the coral finally begins to disappear altogether.

478
00:41:37,640 --> 00:41:39,760
Surface, surface, Nadir.

479
00:41:39,760 --> 00:41:44,200
My depth now, 300 metres. Over.

480
00:41:45,480 --> 00:41:50,160
At this depth, the pressure bearing down on the submersible's sphere

481
00:41:50,160 --> 00:41:53,000
is more than 30 times that at the surface.

482
00:41:55,040 --> 00:41:59,240
That's an incredible 450 pounds per square inch.

483
00:42:03,480 --> 00:42:06,680
Here, there's a sediment that is drifting down from above,

484
00:42:06,680 --> 00:42:09,240
cloaking the surface of the reef.

485
00:42:09,240 --> 00:42:11,920
That means it's very difficult for any organism

486
00:42:11,920 --> 00:42:16,280
to get a hold of the rock, because it's continually being swept down.

487
00:42:16,280 --> 00:42:21,920
The sediment itself is the result of the erosion of the coral skeletons from high above,

488
00:42:21,920 --> 00:42:25,240
but also from the remains of coral

489
00:42:25,240 --> 00:42:28,360
that parrot fish have munched and excreted

490
00:42:28,360 --> 00:42:30,880
and it's slowly drifting down here.

491
00:42:30,880 --> 00:42:34,280
So, this is so deep, it's almost barren.

492
00:42:44,480 --> 00:42:46,200
But not quite.

493
00:42:48,760 --> 00:42:51,480
At almost the deepest point of our dive,

494
00:42:51,480 --> 00:42:53,440
something pays us a visit.

495
00:42:56,760 --> 00:42:59,840
There's a fish to your right, David. On your shoulder.

496
00:42:59,840 --> 00:43:01,360
Look at this!

497
00:43:07,000 --> 00:43:09,520
It's a deep-water grouper.

498
00:43:09,520 --> 00:43:13,720
No-one has ever seen them up close like this, at this depth.

499
00:43:21,200 --> 00:43:24,840
'It appears to find the sub and its occupants fascinating.'

500
00:43:27,040 --> 00:43:30,360
And he's big, this boy. He must be...

501
00:43:32,600 --> 00:43:35,720
..four, five feet long - a couple of metres, almost.

502
00:43:38,520 --> 00:43:39,680
Hello.

503
00:43:39,680 --> 00:43:41,040
Oh, gosh!

504
00:43:45,800 --> 00:43:49,200
And why he is down here, what he's looking for - who knows?

505
00:43:56,960 --> 00:43:58,160
He's going up.

506
00:44:00,000 --> 00:44:01,320
So are we.

507
00:44:11,600 --> 00:44:16,320
As we ascend, light and colour returns to the reef around us.

508
00:44:58,400 --> 00:45:02,240
'Our on-board reef scientist, Professor Justin Marshall,

509
00:45:02,240 --> 00:45:05,840
'is on hand to retrieve the sample we gathered in the darkness.'

510
00:45:05,840 --> 00:45:08,440
- What do you reckon? 
- Well, it's fantastic.

511
00:45:08,440 --> 00:45:12,320
This is one of the deepest samples ever from Osprey Reef.

512
00:45:12,320 --> 00:45:14,840
- It's wonderful. 
- Will it survive? Will it still live?

513
00:45:14,840 --> 00:45:17,280
It will still live and we'll take samples back

514
00:45:17,280 --> 00:45:20,720
- to the University of Queensland and work on it there. 
- Great.

515
00:45:22,600 --> 00:45:25,800
In fact, they think this coral has never been reported

516
00:45:25,800 --> 00:45:29,120
in this part of the world before and may be new to science.

517
00:45:33,720 --> 00:45:36,520
We are a long way off from having a solution

518
00:45:36,520 --> 00:45:39,680
to the threats which now face the Great Barrier Reef.

519
00:45:41,720 --> 00:45:43,600
But in these deep water samples

520
00:45:43,600 --> 00:45:46,680
and in the scientists' experimental tanks,

521
00:45:46,680 --> 00:45:48,600
there is a small glimmer of hope.

522
00:45:51,200 --> 00:45:53,520
But time is not on our side -...

523
00:45:57,520 --> 00:46:01,280
..an opinion shared by many of the scientists I've met along the way.

524
00:46:05,880 --> 00:46:08,360
Are you fearful for the future of the reef?

525
00:46:08,360 --> 00:46:10,000
There will be change, for sure.

526
00:46:10,000 --> 00:46:14,800
I mean, we're seeing change within our own human lives' timescales now.

527
00:46:14,800 --> 00:46:16,600
And what's your prediction about

528
00:46:16,600 --> 00:46:19,800
what it's going to look like in another hundred years?

529
00:46:19,800 --> 00:46:21,720
The sea levels will be higher.

530
00:46:21,720 --> 00:46:24,520
We want to know - as a scientist, we want to know

531
00:46:24,520 --> 00:46:26,920
how the Great Barrier Reef will respond.

532
00:46:26,920 --> 00:46:30,640
Whether it has the resilience to bounce back

533
00:46:30,640 --> 00:46:35,240
with the future changes to the climate remains to be seen.

534
00:46:39,880 --> 00:46:41,480
Here on the Great Barrier Reef,

535
00:46:41,480 --> 00:46:45,160
we've lost about 50% of the coral since the early 1980s.

536
00:46:47,280 --> 00:46:51,480
Coral provides a habitat for over a million species.

537
00:46:51,480 --> 00:46:54,720
This is such a fundamental part of our oceans

538
00:46:54,720 --> 00:46:57,640
and the fact that it's going to disappear on our watch,

539
00:46:57,640 --> 00:46:58,840
it's incredible.

540
00:47:16,440 --> 00:47:20,160
When the Great Barrier Reef starts to go seriously backwards,

541
00:47:20,160 --> 00:47:21,960
the next generation is going to say,

542
00:47:21,960 --> 00:47:25,760
"Why didn't you guys do something about it when you had a chance?"

543
00:47:25,760 --> 00:47:27,720
And well may they ask that

544
00:47:27,720 --> 00:47:30,840
because we're not doing what we should be doing

545
00:47:30,840 --> 00:47:32,880
and we're going to pay the price.

546
00:47:51,000 --> 00:47:54,400
The Great Barrier Reef is in grave danger.

547
00:47:54,400 --> 00:47:57,560
The twin perils brought by climate change

548
00:47:57,560 --> 00:48:02,120
and increase in the temperature of the ocean and in its acidity

549
00:48:02,120 --> 00:48:05,080
threaten its very existence.

550
00:48:05,080 --> 00:48:08,400
If they continue to rise at the present rate,

551
00:48:08,400 --> 00:48:11,960
the reefs will be gone within decades.

552
00:48:11,960 --> 00:48:15,720
And that would be a global catastrophe.

553
00:48:18,480 --> 00:48:22,440
About one quarter of the species of fish in the world

554
00:48:22,440 --> 00:48:25,960
spend some part of their lives in the reefs.

555
00:48:25,960 --> 00:48:29,560
If the reefs go, the fish will also disappear.

556
00:48:30,800 --> 00:48:33,400
And that could affect the livelihood

557
00:48:33,400 --> 00:48:36,960
and diet of human communities worldwide.

558
00:48:38,440 --> 00:48:42,440
But there's surely another reason why we should protect the reefs.

559
00:48:42,440 --> 00:48:46,680
They are among this planet's richest, most complex

560
00:48:46,680 --> 00:48:49,200
and most beautiful ecosystems.

561
00:49:05,880 --> 00:49:10,600
Do we really care so little about the Earth on which we live

562
00:49:10,600 --> 00:49:14,560
that we don't wish to protect one of its greatest wonders

563
00:49:14,560 --> 00:49:17,640
from the consequences of our behaviour?

564
00:49:42,440 --> 00:49:45,160
For this series, the production team were determined

565
00:49:45,160 --> 00:49:47,960
to show the Barrier Reef in a new way,

566
00:49:47,960 --> 00:49:50,800
by filming in some of its most remote areas...

567
00:49:53,280 --> 00:49:54,920
..and allowing me to meet

568
00:49:54,920 --> 00:49:58,080
some of its more unusual and surprising inhabitants.

569
00:50:00,440 --> 00:50:03,800
'This took us out onto the top of Heron Island's reef,

570
00:50:03,800 --> 00:50:05,960
'which is only exposed at low tide.

571
00:50:09,520 --> 00:50:12,360
'But we had to tread carefully, accompanied by guides,

572
00:50:12,360 --> 00:50:15,560
'to ensure that we didn't damage any of the coral.'

573
00:50:16,840 --> 00:50:19,040
Anybody who's coming on here, it's weird at first,

574
00:50:19,040 --> 00:50:22,400
but just try and walk on the dead coral - the concrete stuff.

575
00:50:22,400 --> 00:50:24,880
'We were there to film an elusive creature

576
00:50:24,880 --> 00:50:28,640
'that feeds in this special habitat when the tide is out -

577
00:50:28,640 --> 00:50:30,160
'the epaulette shark.'

578
00:50:31,360 --> 00:50:34,920
There's one with a tail - the first one is there.

579
00:50:34,920 --> 00:50:37,520
- Just gone. 
- It's gone under there.

580
00:50:39,640 --> 00:50:44,680
'Professor Gillian Renshaw has been studying these sharks for 20 years.'

581
00:50:44,680 --> 00:50:46,800
It's very hard to see the epaulettes

582
00:50:46,800 --> 00:50:50,040
because they're cryptically coloured and blend in very well

583
00:50:50,040 --> 00:50:53,800
with the fingers of coral that are rising out of the reef platform.

584
00:50:55,240 --> 00:50:58,040
'It's a challenging location, not least because

585
00:50:58,040 --> 00:51:00,920
'it's only accessible for short periods of time.'

586
00:51:03,080 --> 00:51:05,360
We've got probably about 40 minutes

587
00:51:05,360 --> 00:51:07,440
to get all of the shots that we need,

588
00:51:07,440 --> 00:51:10,840
so I shouldn't really be talking to you, we should be getting this.

589
00:51:10,840 --> 00:51:15,000
- OK, quiet please! 
- Camera's rolling. And action, David.

590
00:51:15,000 --> 00:51:18,240
The epaulette shark remains on the reef,

591
00:51:18,240 --> 00:51:20,640
even when the tide goes out.

592
00:51:21,880 --> 00:51:23,880
Of course, with so little water,

593
00:51:23,880 --> 00:51:27,080
it doesn't get as much oxygen as it requires normally, but...

594
00:51:29,040 --> 00:51:30,760
'Although my piece is done,

595
00:51:30,760 --> 00:51:34,160
'the team must now film the shark's unique walking behaviour.'

596
00:51:34,160 --> 00:51:36,880
The water is literally pouring in around the equipment

597
00:51:36,880 --> 00:51:38,560
and over our feet.

598
00:51:38,560 --> 00:51:41,200
We've got about 10 to 15 minutes to get this sequence finished

599
00:51:41,200 --> 00:51:43,680
and get back in the boats before we're literally cut off

600
00:51:43,680 --> 00:51:45,760
and we can't get back to the boats.

601
00:51:47,840 --> 00:51:50,320
'The tide creeps in around us.'

602
00:51:55,880 --> 00:51:58,200
He's walking beautifully, now. Look at that.

603
00:52:00,280 --> 00:52:03,640
Let's try and get it in the water a bit.

604
00:52:03,640 --> 00:52:06,600
Really nice performance from the epaulette shark.

605
00:52:08,480 --> 00:52:11,240
'Now, it's a race against time to get off the reef.'

606
00:52:12,320 --> 00:52:13,800
Are we ready for the boat, now?

607
00:52:13,800 --> 00:52:16,280
Geraldine, can we get David on, please?

608
00:52:21,360 --> 00:52:23,800
Yeah, looked stunning. Worth the stress.

609
00:52:25,560 --> 00:52:28,720
'This trip took us from the very top of the reef

610
00:52:28,720 --> 00:52:30,800
'down almost to its bottom...

611
00:52:31,920 --> 00:52:34,720
'..for our most ambitious sequence of the series -...

612
00:52:36,040 --> 00:52:38,560
'..to attempt the deepest dive in this area

613
00:52:38,560 --> 00:52:42,320
'and collect a sample of the mysterious coral that survives there.

614
00:52:43,720 --> 00:52:46,160
'And it's down to cameraman Paul Williams

615
00:52:46,160 --> 00:52:48,480
'to film our mission single-handedly.'

616
00:52:50,400 --> 00:52:52,200
I'm on my own down there.

617
00:52:52,200 --> 00:52:54,240
I've gone over it and over it again in my mind,

618
00:52:54,240 --> 00:52:57,040
about what we're trying to do and how we're going to do it,

619
00:52:57,040 --> 00:52:59,040
so I think I've got it locked in.

620
00:52:59,040 --> 00:53:01,120
I hope haven't forgotten anything.

621
00:53:01,120 --> 00:53:03,200
'It's something of a squeeze in the sub,

622
00:53:03,200 --> 00:53:06,160
'with all of Paul's filming equipment.'

623
00:53:06,160 --> 00:53:08,800
Do you mind if I just give you that for a moment?

624
00:53:09,880 --> 00:53:12,520
'But our third crew member is essential.

625
00:53:12,520 --> 00:53:14,920
'He's the pilot, Buck Taylor.'

626
00:53:19,120 --> 00:53:22,240
I'm sitting with a big camera on my shoulder

627
00:53:22,240 --> 00:53:25,280
and two other cameras, which were outside the sub,

628
00:53:25,280 --> 00:53:28,480
controlled by laptops which were both on my lap.

629
00:53:32,160 --> 00:53:35,200
The sound kit was under Buck's feet.

630
00:53:35,200 --> 00:53:36,440
It was tight in there.

631
00:53:44,720 --> 00:53:46,080
David, do you mind?

632
00:53:46,080 --> 00:53:49,120
- Would you get your towel and just give that a little wipe there? 
- Yup.

633
00:53:49,120 --> 00:53:50,920
Thank you, sir.

634
00:53:53,800 --> 00:53:55,920
'For the first part of the dive,

635
00:53:55,920 --> 00:53:58,720
'underwater cameramen filmed the sub's descent.

636
00:53:59,800 --> 00:54:02,960
'But at about 60 metres, they reached their limit.

637
00:54:05,040 --> 00:54:07,120
'It's only possible to venture further

638
00:54:07,120 --> 00:54:09,560
'within the protection of the submarine.

639
00:54:10,760 --> 00:54:14,240
'As we enter the mesophotic zone, around 100 metres down,

640
00:54:14,240 --> 00:54:15,840
'we're on our own.

641
00:54:20,120 --> 00:54:22,680
'To get the best shots of the reef beyond,

642
00:54:22,680 --> 00:54:25,640
'Paul requires all of Buck's skill as a pilot.'

643
00:54:26,800 --> 00:54:29,440
Do you want to try some other light options?

644
00:54:29,440 --> 00:54:32,000
- What have you got? 
- I can give you that.

645
00:54:32,000 --> 00:54:35,800
Yeah, put the higher ones on, take the lower ones off.

646
00:54:35,800 --> 00:54:39,960
- How's that? 
- Yes. Actually, that looks better. 
- Isn't it lovely?

647
00:54:39,960 --> 00:54:42,480
- Probably full of nooks and crannies. 
- Yeah.

648
00:54:42,480 --> 00:54:44,240
Buck, the sub driver, was brilliant.

649
00:54:44,240 --> 00:54:46,000
He'd find a drift in the currents

650
00:54:46,000 --> 00:54:48,040
and then we'd just drift across the coral.

651
00:54:48,040 --> 00:54:50,360
What's nice is, I can actually see the wall.

652
00:54:50,360 --> 00:54:53,360
- That's a very good angle for me. 
- Is it? 
- Yeah.

653
00:54:53,360 --> 00:54:56,800
So, just let us drift a tiny bit to starboard.

654
00:54:56,800 --> 00:54:58,640
And...action, David.

655
00:54:58,640 --> 00:55:04,320
This wall of rock ahead of me is actually the flank of Osprey Reef -

656
00:55:04,320 --> 00:55:07,080
an oasis for life.

657
00:55:07,080 --> 00:55:09,720
'But we weren't down here just to look.

658
00:55:09,720 --> 00:55:13,600
'We also wanted to collect samples for deep reef scientists...

659
00:55:15,480 --> 00:55:18,400
'..and that proved easier said than done.'

660
00:55:18,400 --> 00:55:21,480
- Oh, no! 
- We have to go and fetch that.

661
00:55:21,480 --> 00:55:22,880
We'll take that on film.

662
00:55:25,200 --> 00:55:28,000
'As we descended beyond 250 metres,

663
00:55:28,000 --> 00:55:31,600
'we entered a landscape rarely seen with the naked eye.

664
00:55:33,760 --> 00:55:37,280
'It was the perfect opportunity simply to explore.'

665
00:55:38,560 --> 00:55:40,920
This is the first time that manned submersibles

666
00:55:40,920 --> 00:55:42,600
have worked at this depth

667
00:55:42,600 --> 00:55:45,320
and it gives one the ability to look and observe

668
00:55:45,320 --> 00:55:48,280
and just do curiosity-driven research.

669
00:55:48,280 --> 00:55:50,120
It's fantastic.

670
00:55:50,120 --> 00:55:52,960
The visibility down here spectacular, isn't it?

671
00:55:52,960 --> 00:55:55,200
It's absolutely pure, yeah.

672
00:55:55,200 --> 00:55:58,400
There were many times when I had to take my eye away from the eyepiece

673
00:55:58,400 --> 00:56:01,320
because I just had to look with my own eyes,

674
00:56:01,320 --> 00:56:04,000
so it goes into the brain properly

675
00:56:04,000 --> 00:56:05,680
in the right perspective.

676
00:56:07,360 --> 00:56:09,640
'Soon, we reached our target depth.'

677
00:56:12,680 --> 00:56:14,200
There it is. 300.

678
00:56:15,760 --> 00:56:21,320
Nobody before has ever been as deep as this on the Great Barrier Reef.

679
00:56:21,320 --> 00:56:22,840
I like it.

680
00:56:22,840 --> 00:56:25,480
LAUGHTER

681
00:56:25,480 --> 00:56:28,240
So, it hasn't even come up on here - 290 metres,

682
00:56:28,240 --> 00:56:31,160
but we've heard that they've just reached 300 metres.

683
00:56:31,160 --> 00:56:34,800
Another thing to add to the things that David's done on this planet.

684
00:56:34,800 --> 00:56:37,080
'The purpose of our record-breaking trip

685
00:56:37,080 --> 00:56:40,880
'was to raise awareness of the reef's fragility.

686
00:56:40,880 --> 00:56:44,200
'Fortunately, while production continued on the series,

687
00:56:44,200 --> 00:56:47,080
'the dive caught the attention of a president.'

688
00:56:48,160 --> 00:56:52,600
- Mr President. 
- When I heard that you had gone down,

689
00:56:52,600 --> 00:56:55,400
you dove into the Great Barrier Reef again...

690
00:56:56,880 --> 00:56:58,800
..60 years after the first time you did it?

691
00:56:58,800 --> 00:57:00,480
- Yes. 
- That impressed me.

692
00:57:00,480 --> 00:57:02,800
Ah, but I was in a sub.

693
00:57:02,800 --> 00:57:05,440
I mean, I was in a very, very remarkable research sub

694
00:57:05,440 --> 00:57:07,760
and we went down to over 300 metres.

695
00:57:07,760 --> 00:57:10,000
Oh, so you went really deep.

696
00:57:10,000 --> 00:57:11,920
And that was just mind-blowing.

697
00:57:13,120 --> 00:57:16,800
The deep dive proved a truly memorable moment for me

698
00:57:16,800 --> 00:57:19,880
and allowed us the unique opportunity of revealing

699
00:57:19,880 --> 00:57:23,520
a part of this great reef that has never before been seen.


