Every day local tour operators are out on the reef and, while their main job is to show visitors our beautiful ecosystems, these days they are also tasked with a bigger calling.
They play an important role in monitoring the reef by creating data which provides valuable information that documents the welfare of our precious marine environment.
Cruise Whitsundays along with a number of other local operators are working closely with the Great Barrier Marine Park to conduct regular assessment and stewardship at specific sites within the Whitsunday Marine Park. Cruise Whitsundays specifically has been tasked with keeping a watchful eye over Hardy Reef, which is the location of Reefworld the Cruise Whitsundays permanently moored pontoon located 39 nautical miles from the mainland in the heart of the Great Barrier Reef.
As part of their dedication to ensuring the health of the reef, Cruise Whitsundays in collaboration with their dive operator Reef Safari Diving, has a trained team of marine biologists and divers conducting weekly tourism surveys as well as quarterly Reef Health Impact Surveys (RHIS).
This information is constantly sent back to the Great Barrier Reef Marine Parks Association (GBRMPA) and used to compile data on the health of the reef. It can then be used as an early warning system of potential negative impacts on the reef.
Among other things the surveys count coral cover, watch for coral predators such as Crown of Thorns star fish and the Drupella (which is a tiny snail that eats the reef) and also for signs of coral bleaching.
“We report anything unusual and if, for example, there was a large outbreak of Crown of Thorns, then previously GBRMPA would send a specialist team to remove them. However, now our trained staff will be able to remove any predators on the spot and keep numbers under control and our reef healthy.” said Julia Farrell Reef Safari’s Master Reef Guide.
In addition to skilled professionals, there is also opportunity for Citizen Scientists to get involved in initiatives that protect and monitor the reef.
Anyone who has a favourite fishing spot or regularly heads out to the reef is asked to come forward and complete sightings through the “Eye on Reef” app created by The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park. You can log marine life you see as well unusual activity.
Individuals do not need to be skilled for this type of data collection as its main purpose is to watch for change and degradation.
A recent report by AIMS (The Australian Institute of Marine Science) stated that the upper and middle Great Barrier Reef actually has more coral cover than when they first started taking records in 1986.
While much media can paint a “doom and gloom” story, it is important to look at the facts and it is statistics like this that inspires Julia to work with the reef.
“I always tell my staff that even if we can change just one per cent then we are making a difference,” she said.
“Martin Luther King didn’t say ‘I have a nightmare’ – he said, ‘I have a dream!’”
Underwater monitoring proves invaluable in recording vital information for the health of the reef
Cruise Whitsundays conduct monitoring from their pontoon located on Hardy Reef, 39 nautical miles out to sea