146
0
0
Like?
Please wait...
About This Project
Sydney Harbour is a long way from the Great Barrier Reef but is surprisingly home to scleractinian (hard) corals. Despite the extreme environmental conditions (low temperatures, low light) corals thrive here. Extreme environments may become the ‘norm’ for reefs and act as refuge environments, as coral reefs are at risk from pollution and global warming. Understanding how the Harbour corals are thriving in Sydney could enable us to better predict the future of coral reefs.

Browse Other Projects on Experiment
Related Projects
Can biome logs transform biomass from a problem to soil-ution?
As catastrophic megafires and flooding intensify across the western United States, fungi and other microbes...
Benefiting Bivalve Hatcheries with Open Source Research in improved Phytoplankton Blends
Every oyster that humanity has consumed started as a miniscule larva, invisible to the naked eye. During...
Tiny worlds in desert moss: Microbes and microfauna in biological soil crusts
Desert mosses live closely with lichens and other microorganisms, together performing vital ecosystem services...

