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18 April 2024

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Citizen scientists discover a Great Barrier Reef coral giant

26-02-2026 01:36 PM


Ammon News - Citizen scientists have discovered what they believe is one of the largest coral colonies ever documented on the Great Barrier Reef.

The coral spans approximately 111 metres in maximum length and covers an estimated area of 3,973 sq m – about half the size of a soccer field.

The Pavona clavus coral was first found by Jan Pope in waters a few hours offshore from Cairns. It was identified as part of the Great Reef Census, a citizen science project run by Citizens of the Reef.

“It was quite glassy and I could see this very strange pattern in the water,” Pope said. “When I jumped in the water, it became obvious to me that I’d found something, that I’d never seen anything like it before.”

Jan Pope, and daughter, Sophie Kalkowski-Pope, surveying reefs from their family vessel as part of the Great Reef Census.

Pope, who has been diving on the Great Barrier Reef for 35 years, described it as “a very surreal underwater landscape. It looks like a rolling meadow.”

Pope’s daughter, Sophie Kalkowski-Pope, surveyed the site with her mother a fortnight later. “We had no idea that something so significant was right here on our doorstep,” she said.

Kalkowski-Pope, marine operations coordinator at Citizens of the Reef, said the census project used crowd-sourced images to monitor coral cover across the Great Barrier Reef. The organisation estimates it has surveyed a quarter of the reef since 2020.

An aim of the project is to identify key source reefs – “hotspots of resilience” that can supply other reefs with larvae when they spawn, Kalkowski-Pope said.

The curator of corals at the Queensland Museum, Dr Tom Bridge, who was not involved in the research, said Pavona clavus was an uncommon and “quite hard to find” coral. “But where it is [found], it can form really, really ridiculously huge colonies,” he said.

In 2024, a coral of the same species, measuring just over 1,000 sq m, was discovered in the waters of Solomon Islands.

The Guardian




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