logo
Deaths of 30,000 fish off WA coast made more likely by climate change, research finds

Deaths of 30,000 fish off WA coast made more likely by climate change, research finds

Yahoo04-02-2025

Marine heatwaves linked to the deaths of 30,000 fish off the Western Australia coast were up to 100 times more likely to occur because of climate change, new research has found.
Waters off WA have been affected by prolonged marine heatwaves since September.
Regions off the north-west coast were hottest, with ocean temperatures 1.5C higher than average over a five-month period and sometimes 4C to 5C higher at the surface.Analysis by the non-profit group Climate Central found climate change had made the marine heatwave 20 times more likely to occur – and the most affected period in November 100 times more likely. Heatwave conditions are triggered when an area is hotter than 90% of recorded temperatures for that time of year over at least five consecutive days.
Dr Andrew Pershing, the chief program officer at Climate Central, which has adapted climate attribution methods for studying major weather events on land to the ocean, said the escalating heat seen off the coast of WA was 'not a normal event'.
Related: Jo Haylen's swift exit after a series of own goals shows NSW Labor has learnt from past mistakes
'This is an event that is directly tied to burning fossil fuels,' he said.
The group's Ocean Climate Shift Index drew on satellite data from organisations including the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and applied 13 climate models, to isolate the effect of carbon pollution from human activities, Pershing said.
Nearly 90% of marine heatwaves were now attributable to human-caused global heating and are expected to increase in frequency, intensity and duration as fossil fuel emissions continue to rise, previous studies have found.
Marine heatwaves caused 'prolonged thermal stress' to marine life, which authorities say probably contributed to the mass fish kill observed at beaches along WA's Pilbara coast.
Australia was 'on the frontline' of these effects, Pershing said. These events led to fish kills and coral bleaching and had widespread consequences for industries including fishing and tourism.
A marine heatwave off the WA coast in 2010-11 damaged more than a third of seagrass meadows in Shark Bay.
Dr Matt Rayson, an oceanographer at the University of Western Australia, who was not involved in the attribution study, said the heat that began building in the north in September had slowly crept down into the western side of Australia, with the ocean getting warmer at the surface.
Autonomous ocean robots, deployed by the university, had also measured temperatures below the surface, finding unusual levels of heat.
Rayson said 90% of the extra energy trapped by greenhouse gases was stored in the ocean, increasing the probability of ocean heatwaves. As well as effects on marine life, this additional energy could translate into severe weather events including tropical cyclones.
WA's unusual marine heat was continuing to escalate. In January, ocean temperatures were consistently at least 1.6C hotter than average, according to Climate Central.
Pershing said marine heatwaves weren't random. They were connected to climate change, he said, and becoming more intense and frequent as humans continued to pollute the atmosphere.
'Humans are affecting the planet in a lot of ways. We're used to thinking of how it affects us on land, but it's affecting everything on the planet, and the ocean is such a huge part of our planet.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Innovative parks aren't just bold urban design—they lower the temperature in cities
Innovative parks aren't just bold urban design—they lower the temperature in cities

Fast Company

time3 hours ago

  • Fast Company

Innovative parks aren't just bold urban design—they lower the temperature in cities

Cities, and those who live in them, are clamoring for more green space, and the benefits parks, trees, and recreation areas provide. The Trust for Public Land's annual ParkScore report found nearly a quarter of Americans in the 100 largest cities don't live within a 10-minute walk of a park or greenspace. While few cities have acres and acres of space to transform into parkland, they do have opportunities to create new types of urban parks, such as elevated parks, pocket parks fashioned from vacant lots, rails-to-trails projects or capping highways to create new greenspaces. New research, including exclusive project analysis for Fast Company, finds that these projects have a significant cooling impact, showcasing how these kinds of infrastructure interventions can provide some of the densest parts of urban America with much-needed cooling. A study conducted by Climate Central on behalf of the High Line found that New York City's iconic linear park offers unique cooling and shading benefits, in addition to the social and environmental benefits of adding parkspace. 'We always had a suspicion that we can also make our community more healthier and livable, and we wanted data around it,' says Alan van Capelle, Executive Director of Friends of the High Line, Researchers started by tracking the urban heat island intensity (UHII) of the areas surrounding the High Line in Manhattan. This measurement captures the additional heat created in urban environments by buildings and pavement, as well as density. Some neighborhoods near the High Line exhibited a 12.9°F UHII, among the highest temperatures Climate Central has found after analyzing 65 U.S. cities. But the park–via the obvious shading impact from the structure itself, but even more importantly, from the additional shading, transpiration and overall cooling benefits of so many additional trees and plants–cut the UHII to just 4.7°F along many stretches of the park, creating an eight degree cooling impact. There was variance along the High Line, with areas that are primarily rocks and shrub exhibiting a less pronounced cooling impact, underscoring how it's not just shading that makes the difference. And it's not exactly news that parks provide cooling benefits to cities. But evidence that adaptive reuse parks in the midst of cities can achieve such pronounced temperature differences suggest that they can be an important tool for urban cooling. Climate Central found that other such parks exhibit similar impacts. In exclusive research for Fast Company, Jennifer Brady, senior data analyst for Climate Central, applied existing data and research to a number of newer urban parks across the country and found similar cooling impacts. Chicago's 606, an elevated rails-to-trails project on the city's near northwest side, may cool the adjacent neighborhoods 6°F to 8°F, depending on the precise build type and density. Klyde Warren Park in Dallas, which caps a highway adjacent to downtown and runs through one of the city's hottest neighborhoods, yields approximately 4°F to 6°F cooler temperatures. The Lafitte Greenway in New Orleans and Railroad Park in Birmingham, Alabama, both located in relatively cooler parts of their respective cities, still cool adjoining areas by 4°F. The design of these parks–including shade structures, shading impact with bridges and overhangs, and of course plants and tree cover–can make a big difference, said Brady. It also helps that much of this kind of abandoned industrial infrastructure–composed of cement and old buildings–adds to the heat, so simply removing them reduces urban heat gain. But it also shows that targeting particular dense areas with the most pronounced heat island effect can be done, and make a dramatic change. There's always been a strong case to transform vacant lots and leftover lots in areas without park access, both from a recreation and health angle as well as public safety. Adding cooling and climate resilience to the list should make an even stronger case for more investment in these kinds of industrial reuse park projects. Last year, the nation's 100 largest cities invested a record $12.2 billion in parks; steering more of that funding towards these types of projects can have serious resilience impacts in an era of heightened climate change. Van Capelle said there's currently 49 other such reuse park projects taking place across North America that are part of the High Line Network, an advocacy group for these kinds of greenspace projects. He sees the heat island mitigation impact as just another reason to advocate for and invest in these projects. 'Being able to step out of your apartment and go into a cool location, being able to know that in the summertime, when the city can become uncomfortable, there's a place like the High Line that runs along a number of neighborhoods is vitally important,' said van Capelle. The final deadline for Fast Company's Next Big Things in Tech Awards is Friday, June 20, at 11:59 p.m. PT. Apply today.

Communities Worldwide Prepare to #ShowYourStripes on June 21
Communities Worldwide Prepare to #ShowYourStripes on June 21

Associated Press

time5 days ago

  • Associated Press

Communities Worldwide Prepare to #ShowYourStripes on June 21

A global initiative turns climate science into conversation PRINCETON, N.J., June 18, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- On Friday, June 21, meteorologists, journalists, scientists, content creators, and communities across the globe will join Show Your Stripes Day. This growing global initiative aims to raise awareness about human-caused climate change through a striking visual language: the Warming Stripes. At the heart of this campaign is a simple, powerful graphic: each stripe represents a year, with blue tones for cooler-than-average years and red for warmer ones. These data-driven visuals, developed by climate scientist Ed Hawkins, transform more than a century of temperature records into a compelling snapshot of our warming world. The stripes don't just show global warming. They localize it. Participants can explore how average temperatures have changed in their own cities, states, or countries, helping to spark public engagement and climate dialogue rooted in lived experience. This year's effort is led by Climate Central, with support from VoLo Foundation, a nonprofit committed to accelerating science-based climate solutions. Why It Matters 'VoLo Foundation Co-Founder and Trustee Thais Lopez Vogel underscores the importance of data in driving action: 'Global warming isn't just an opinion. It's a fact. Data moves us from debate to action. Here's how temperatures are rising where you live.' 'The more people understand the rising harms of our changing climate to the people, places, and things they love, the more they will move toward action,' emphasized Bernadette Woods Placky, VP of Engagement, Climate Matters Director, and Chief Meteorologist at Climate Central. How to #ShowYourStripes: These graphics, grounded in the latest science, also highlight the link between rising global temperatures and extreme weather events such as heat waves, hurricanes, droughts, and wildfires. By participating in #ShowYourStripes, individuals and institutions help make climate change visible, local, and urgent, one conversation at a time. MEDIA CONTACTS: VoLo Foundation Carlos Roa, Senior Press and PR Director 📧 [email protected] 🌐 Climate Central Shel Winkley, Weather & Climate Engagement Specialist 📧 [email protected] View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE VoLo Foundation

Communities Worldwide Prepare to #ShowYourStripes on June 21
Communities Worldwide Prepare to #ShowYourStripes on June 21

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Yahoo

Communities Worldwide Prepare to #ShowYourStripes on June 21

A global initiative turns climate science into conversation PRINCETON, N.J., June 18, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- On Friday, June 21, meteorologists, journalists, scientists, content creators, and communities across the globe will join Show Your Stripes Day. This growing global initiative aims to raise awareness about human-caused climate change through a striking visual language: the Warming Stripes. At the heart of this campaign is a simple, powerful graphic: each stripe represents a year, with blue tones for cooler-than-average years and red for warmer ones. These data-driven visuals, developed by climate scientist Ed Hawkins, transform more than a century of temperature records into a compelling snapshot of our warming world. The stripes don't just show global warming. They localize it. Participants can explore how average temperatures have changed in their own cities, states, or countries, helping to spark public engagement and climate dialogue rooted in lived experience. This year's effort is led by Climate Central, with support from VoLo Foundation, a nonprofit committed to accelerating science-based climate solutions. Why It Matters"VoLo Foundation Co-Founder and Trustee Thais Lopez Vogel underscores the importance of data in driving action: "Global warming isn't just an opinion. It's a fact. Data moves us from debate to action. Here's how temperatures are rising where you live." "The more people understand the rising harms of our changing climate to the people, places, and things they love, the more they will move toward action," emphasized Bernadette Woods Placky, VP of Engagement, Climate Matters Director, and Chief Meteorologist at Climate Central. How to #ShowYourStripes: Download Your Stripes: Get the global image at or go to Climate Central's interactive platform to generate a free graphic for your city, state, or country. Show Off Your Stripes: Share the graphic on social media, set it as your profile picture, post it in group chats, or drop it in your workplace Slack or Teams. Tag and Amplify: Use the hashtag #ShowYourStripes and tag @ClimateCentral to spread the word. Tell the Story: Share why you're showing your stripes. Personal stories can turn data into action. These graphics, grounded in the latest science, also highlight the link between rising global temperatures and extreme weather events such as heat waves, hurricanes, droughts, and wildfires. By participating in #ShowYourStripes, individuals and institutions help make climate change visible, local, and urgent, one conversation at a time. MEDIA CONTACTS:VoLo FoundationCarlos Roa, Senior Press and PR Director📧 croa@ Climate CentralShel Winkley, Weather & Climate Engagement Specialist📧 swinkley@ View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE VoLo Foundation Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store