University
of Guam researcher Dr. Laurie Raymundo conducting a health assessment of a
bleached Acropora muricata thicket in Apra Harbor, Guam, October 2017. Credit:
Dave Burdick
Benefits to society from coral
reefs, including fisheries, tourism, coastal protection, pharmaceutical
discovery and more, are estimated at about $9.8 trillion per year. For the
first time, an international team led by Smithsonian researchers estimated the
extent of coral bleaching worldwide during a global marine heat wave, finding
that half of the world's reefs experienced significant damage. Another heat
wave began in 2023 and is ongoing.
The analysis was published in Nature Communications.
How coral bleaching happens
It takes two partners to make a
coral: a tiny animal related to a jellyfish that secretes the hard coral
structure and an even tinier algae that turn sunlight into the energy the
animal partner needs to live.
Bleaching occurs under heat stress, when the partnership breaks down, and the coral
loses its algal symbionts—its source of energy—and turns white. Bleaching leads
to reduced growth, less reproduction and even death when it is especially
severe or sustained.
Measuring the third global bleaching event
To obtain their estimate of the extent of reef damage from the "Third Global Coral Bleaching Event" (2014–2017), an international team from dozens of countries worldwide, led by researchers at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI), James Cook University in Australia and the former director of Coral Reef Watch at the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), combined satellite images of ocean water temperature from the Coral Reef Watch system with reef observations from in the water and aerial surveys around the world.
Extensive
coral mortality occurred at Kiritimati (Christmas Island), Kiribati,
illustrated by images from before record heat stress in July 2015 (above) and
after record heat stress in July 2017 (below). Credit: Kieran Cox, Kristina
Tietjen
"This is the most
geographically extensive analysis of coral bleaching surveys ever done,"
said Sean Connolly, a senior scientist at the Smithsonian. "Nearly 200
co-authors from 143 institutions in 41 countries and territories contributed data."
Across more than 15,000 reef
surveys, 80% of reefs experienced moderate or greater bleaching, and 35% of
reefs experienced moderate or greater mortality.
After calibrating the relationship
between heat stress and coral damage at the surveyed sites, the team used
satellite-derived heat stress measures to estimate how much bleaching occurred
on reefs all around the world, including those that were not surveyed.
The team estimated that more than
50% of coral reefs worldwide suffered significant bleaching and 15% experienced
significant mortality. Global decline of coral reefs affects many services
reefs provide, like tourism and food supply.
Escalating heat stress on reefs
"Levels of heat stress were so extreme during this event that Coral Reef Watch had to create new, higher bleaching alert levels that were not needed during prior events," said first author C. Mark Eakin, former director of Coral Reef Watch and chief scientific advisor for the Netflix film "Chasing Coral".
In
addition to corals, marine heat waves also impacted reef fishes, as seen in
2016 along Fiji's Coral Coast. Credit: Victor Bonito
"Around half of reef locations
affected by bleaching-level heat stress were exposed twice or more during the
three-year event—often with devastating consequences," said Scott Heron,
professor of physics at James Cook University.
"That included back-to-back
events on Australia's Great Barrier Reef. Three more bleaching events have
happened there since. We are seeing that reefs don't have time to recover
properly before the next bleaching event occurs."
Entering a fourth global event
In the past 30 years, Earth
has lost 50% of its corals because the oceans absorb most of the heat
people create when they burn fossil fuels. If the oceans did not absorb the
heat, air temperatures would be around 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees
Fahrenheit). Data from around the world shows that Earth is now in a Fourth
Global Coral Bleaching Event.
"Our results show that the Third Global Coral Bleaching Event was by far the most severe and widespread coral bleaching event on record," Connolly said. "And yet, reefs are currently experiencing an even more severe Fourth Event, which started in early 2023."
Co-author
Sean Connolly leads STRI's Rohr Reef Resilience project, asking how reefs
resist variable ocean temperatures during regional upwelling of cold, nutrient
rich waters. Credit: Ana Endara
"Local,
regional and global economies rely heavily on the health of natural systems,
such as coral reefs, but we often take them for granted," said Joshua
Tewksbury, the director of STRI.
"It is vital that science communities come together, like this global team has done, to track how these critical systems are changing. Doing this well, and at scale, requires connecting geographies and combining technologies—from Earth observation satellites to in-the-water surveys that calibrate observations from space and show us the extent of the damage."
Provided by Smithsonian




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