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INDUSTRY NEWSEach month, we bring together the latest industry news from the Asia-Pacific region, as well as all over our water planet. To find out the most up-to-date news and views, check out the website or follow us on our various social media @scubadivermag www.scubadivermag.com.au/news GREAT BARRIER REEF: BEST CORAL COVER IN 36 YEARSDr Terry Cummins, currently the President of Dive Queensland and a prominent figure in the global dive community, gives his thoughts on diving the Great Barrier Reef and dispels some rumours currently in circulationThe Great Barrier Reef (GBR) was World Heritagelisted in 1981 and is considered one of the World’s Seven Natural Wonders. It covers 344,400 square kms and is 2,300km long - or approximately half the length of the Eastern Australian coastline. It comprises 3,000 individual reefs, 300 coral cays, 600 continental islands and 150 inshore mangrove islands, making it the largest barrier reef in the world.
Apart from its size, the GBR has high levels of biodiversity and is considered one of the most-complex natural systems on Earth. With over 600 types of soft and hard corals, more than 100 species of jellyfish, 3,000 varieties of molluscs, 500 species of worms, 1,625 types of fish, 133 different species of sharks and rays, six out of the seven sea turtles found in the world and more than 30 species of marine mammals, it is an enormous ecosystem.
I agree with Ridd that the ‘mass bleaching events’ described by the press and some institutions are entirely misleading. Yes, there have been four bleaching events in pockets along the GBR’s 2,300km length, which is hardly ‘mass’. One of these events was in the 1990s and the other three in 2016, 2017 and 2020. There has been minimal bleaching along the entire length of the GBR in 2021 and 2022. Coral bleaching is not coral death! Impacted corals can, and many do, recover.
There are other instances of misinformation about diving the GBR. Here are a few results from my PhD thesis that you may find interesting where I surveyed over 530 divers returning from a trip to the reefs off Cairns. Please note that I asked them whether they had dived on coral reefs before visiting the Cairns section of the GBRMP, 75% of them indicated they had. Further analysis revealed that they had collectively dived on coral reefs at 841 locations across 16 countries/regions, so they were in an excellent position to compare their dive with other dives they had done elsewhere. The analysis revealed 72% of the divers were satisfied or extremely satisfied with the quality and abundance of coral, 76% were satisfied or extremely satisfied with the quality and abundance of marine life. Also 79% were satisfied or extremely satisfied with the underwater visibility and 85% were satisfied or extremely satisfied with the general diving quality.
These rumours of depth and time restrictions in Queensland are exactly that – a stupid rumour which may have been generated from the operational character of some dive packages. This is where some dive operators offer three 45 minutes dives on a day trip at different locations. Of course, the liveaboards offer five dives per day or even more. I have spent all my adult life in the dive and dive tourism industry sectors and have been diving the GBR since the early 1970s.
My wife Cathie and I dive the Cairns section of the GBR weekly with various operators. Our dive profiles regularly involve 60-minute plus bottom times, and we regularly reach depths of over 20m. We are not sure where this other equally misleading rumour – ‘you can’t dive below 40m’ comes from, especially since the Queensland Government, in close consultation with the dive industry, was the first to introduce a ‘Technical Diving Code of Practice’. So yes, you can participate in technical diving in Queensland, training and extended range.
Having dived in over 16 countries and logged over 7,200 dives, I can honestly say the diving Queensland has to offer visitors is extraordinary. It is also has without a doubt the best managed marine park on the planet. So, you will not have ticked all the boxes until you visit the Great Barrier Reef.