No. The Great Barrier Reef has summer, autumn, winter and spring, but winters are warm and mild compared to southern regions. Unlike the "Top End" of Australia, the Great Barrier Reef does not have just a "wet season" and a "dry season".
The Great Barrier Reef is bordered only by the Queensland coast.
The Great Barrier Reef is a marine biome, so the only grass that grows there is seagrass, which is not a true grass. There are 15 known species of seagrass in the Great Barrier Reef.
The Great Barrier Reef
not very as coral needs warm tropical tempretures to survive
Yes. In 1981, the Great Barrier Reef gained international recognition through its inscription on the World Heritage List. The Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area is the world's largest and is one of only a few World Heritage Areas that satisfy all four natural World Heritage Criteria.
Only some types of fish.
Indonesia is a tropical country. Indonesia only experience 2 season. Hot season and rainy season. But not fall.
The depth of the Great Barrier Reef varies. The coral which makes up the Great Barrier reef is believed to extend to a depth of around 500m in some places, but the actual living polyps only go down as far as 30 metres. The water in the channel between the shoreline and the reef reaches about 60 metres in depth.
This is the world's largest coral reef, the Great Barrier Reef. It is over 2300 km in length, and the only living organism visible from space. The Great Barrier Reef lies off Australia's northeast coast, in the Coral Sea.
According to most sources, the Great Barrier Reef was only built between 2000 and 10 000 years ago - some time after any of the significant ice ages.
The Great Barrier Reef is most famous for its extensive coral reefs and islands. Covering 344,400 square kilometres, it is the largest coral reef in the world, and the only living organism visible from space.
If you are pinning it down to only two, they would have to be Ayers Rock and the Great Barrier Reef.