• Some coral reefs are keeping pace with o

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Tue Sep 7 21:30:38 2021
    Some coral reefs are keeping pace with ocean warming

    Date:
    September 7, 2021
    Source:
    Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Summary:
    Some coral communities are becoming more heat tolerant as ocean
    temperatures rise, offering hope for corals in a changing climate.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    Some coral communities are becoming more heat tolerant as ocean
    temperatures rise, offering hope for corals in a changing climate.


    ========================================================================== After a series of marine heatwaves hit the Phoenix Islands Protected
    Area (PIPA) in the central Pacific Ocean, a new study finds the impact
    of heat stress on the coral communities lessened over time.

    While a 2002-2003 heatwave devastated coral communities in PIPA, the
    reefs recovered and experienced minimal losses during a similar event
    in 2009-2010.

    Then, in 2015-2016, a massive heatwave put twice as much heat stress
    on the corals, yet the die-off was much less severe than expected,
    according to new research published in Geophysical Research Letters,
    AGU's journal for high- impact reports with immediate implications
    spanning all Earth and space sciences.

    The authors of the new study suspect heat-tolerant offspring from the
    surviving corals are repopulating the reefs, allowing the community to
    keep pace with warming seas, at least for the time being.

    The new study could help coral reef managers identify coral communities
    most likely to survive in the warming ocean, improving conservation and restoration outcomes.

    "It's easy to lose faith in coral reefs," said first author Michael Fox,
    a postdoctoral scientist and coral reef ecologist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI). "But in PIPA, which is protected from
    local stressors, and where reefs have enough time to recover between
    heatwaves, the coral populations are doing better than expected."
    UNDERWATER HEATWAVES


    ==========================================================================
    Just like on land, heatwaves underwater are becoming more frequent and
    intense as the world warms, putting stress on ocean ecosystems. High temperatures hit coral reefs especially hard by causing widespread
    bleaching events, where corals eject the symbiotic algae in their tissues, further weakening the animals. With continued ocean warming, coral reefs
    face a dim future.

    In the new study, researchers monitored coral communities at four islands within PIPA, an area encompassing over 400,000-square-kilometers of
    coral reef and deep-sea habitat. The Republic of Kiribati established
    the reserve in 2008, and the United Nations Educational, Scientific
    and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) designated PIPA as a World Heritage
    Site in 2010. "The protected area gives us a rare opportunity to study
    pristine and isolated coral reef ecosystems, a privilege for which we
    thank the people of Kiribati," said co- author Anne Cohen, a marine
    scientist at WHOI.

    The team used daily satellite data and temperature loggers to examine
    how each heatwave impacted the corals. They ruled out 11 environmental
    factors that might explain the higher-than-expected survival following
    the 2009-2010 and 2015-2016 heatwaves, such as greater cloud cover or
    more gradual warming.

    After the 2002-2003 heatwave, the surveyed sites lost more than
    three-quarters of their coral cover. The reef was beginning to recover
    when the 2009-2010 heatwave hit, sparking fears of widespread bleaching,
    but two years later, coral cover had increased by more than 5%. Following
    the "Super El Nin~o" in 2015-2016, which raised ocean temperatures by 3
    degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit), the loss of coral cover was
    40% -- about half of the 2002 losses, despite causing twice the level
    of thermal stress.

    A SOURCE OF HOPE FOR CORAL REEFS Many of the reef-building species
    survived the heatwaves. "We're seeing areas that were devoid of corals
    after 2002-2003 that are now flourishing with most of the original
    species," Fox said.



    ==========================================================================
    At other reefs worldwide, sometimes only a handful of especially hardy
    or fast- growing species recover after a bleaching event. Coral larvae
    can float long distances on ocean currents, but due to PIPA's isolation,
    the researchers hypothesize that local heat-tolerant individuals are repopulating the reefs.

    Now that the researchers have shown that some coral communities have the potential to keep up with ocean warming, their next step is to figure
    out how they are doing it.

    The findings are "important for giving us hope for the future of coral
    reefs, and also for helping to maintain support for protecting reefs,
    including efforts to reduce local threats, like pollution, sedimentation
    and overfishing that undermine the reefs' ability to adapt," said Lizzie McLeod, the Global Reef Systems Lead at the Nature Conservancy, who was
    not involved in the study.

    She recommends reef conservationists prioritize the conservation of heat- tolerant reefs, because they can act as climate refuges that repopulate
    other sites decimated by heatwaves.

    The study's authors caution that even these remarkable corals have their
    limits and reversing climate change remains paramount. As heatwaves become
    more frequent or intense, even heat-tolerant communities could die out.

    "We're in a race against time, so anything that increases the
    chances that corals are going to make it is really good news,"
    said Nancy Knowlton, the Sant Chair in Marine Science Emerita at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, who was not part of the
    study. "The corals are doing their part," she said. "We have to do ours." ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    Woods_Hole_Oceanographic_Institution. Note: Content may be edited for
    style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Michael D. Fox, Anne L. Cohen, Randi D. Rotjan, Sangeeta Mangubhai,
    Stuart A. Sandin, Jennifer E. Smith, Simon R. Thorrold, Laura
    Dissly, Nathan R. Mollica, David Obura. Increasing Coral Reef
    Resilience Through Successive Marine Heatwaves. Geophysical Research
    Letters, 2021; 48 (17) DOI: 10.1029/2021GL094128 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/09/210907175344.htm

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