For Charlie Veron, the veteran marine biologist, new evidence of the prospect of "super corals" offers the prospect of more time for the world's coral reefs hard-hit by climate change.
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| Sea mission: (from left) John Rumney, Managing Director of GBR Legacy, Dr Charlie Veron with new coral species, and Dr Dean Miller, Director of Science and Media GBR Legacy. |
Dr Veron, who earned the moniker of the "godfather of coral" for naming about one-fifth of the world's corals, has just returned from a mission funded by donations to locate corals unusually resilient to the past two summers of severe bleaching on the Great Barrier Reef.
"There were endless hectares of what used to be luxurious corals, which are now totally dead," Dr Veron said in Port Douglas at the end of a three-week expedition by the Great Barrier Reef Legacy.
However, in some outer reefs off far north Queensland, corals were found by the scientists to have fared relatively well, offering signs that critical biodiversity had survived.
Read Peter Hannam’s story in today’s Melbourne Age - “‘Super corals' may offer ailing Great Barrier Reef some 'breathing space'."

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