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Caribbean corals in crisis: record thermal stress, bleaching, and mortality in 2005
- Source :
- PLoS ONE, Vol 5, Iss 11, p e13969 (2010), PLoS ONE, Central Caribbean Marine Institute
- Publication Year :
- 2010
- Publisher :
- Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2010.
-
Abstract
- Background:The rising temperature of the world’s oceans has become a major threat to coral reefs globally as the severityand frequency of mass coral bleaching and mortality events increase. In 2005, high ocean temperatures in the tropicalAtlantic and Caribbean resulted in the most severe bleaching event ever recorded in the basin.Methodology/Principal Findings:Satellite-based tools provided warnings for coral reef managers and scientists, guiding both the timing and location of researchers’ field observations as anomalously warm conditions developed and spread across the greater Caribbean region from June to October 2005. Field surveys of bleaching and mortality exceeded prior efforts in detail and extent, and provided a new standard for documenting the effects of bleaching and for testing nowcast and forecast products. Collaborators from 22 countries undertook the most comprehensive documentation of basin-scale bleaching to date and found that over 80% of corals bleached and over 40% died at many sites. The most severe bleaching coincided with waters nearest a western Atlantic warm pool that was centered off the northern end of the Lesser Antilles.Conclusions/Significance:Thermal stress during the 2005 event exceeded any observed from the Caribbean in the prior 20 years, and regionally-averaged temperatures were the warmest in over 150 years. Comparison of satellite data against field surveys demonstrated a significant predictive relationship between accumulated heat stress (measured using NOAA CoralReef Watch’s Degree Heating Weeks) and bleaching intensity. This severe, widespread bleaching and mortality willundoubtedly have long-term consequences for reef ecosystems and suggests a troubled future for tropical marine ecosystems under a warming climate NOAA Coral Reef Conservation Program Article Nr: e13969
- Subjects :
- Ecology/Global Change Ecology
Coral bleaching
Climate
Oceans and Seas
Fisheries
Climate change
lcsh:Medicine
Tropical Atlantic
Environment
Caribbean Sea
Ecology/Marine and Freshwater Ecology
Ecology/Conservation and Restoration Ecology
Stress, Physiological
Water Movements
Animals
lcsh:Science
Reef
Biology
Ecosystem
Multidisciplinary
geography.geographical_feature_category
Geography
Ecology
Coral Reefs
Global warming
fungi
lcsh:R
Temperature
Ocean acidification
bleaching
Coral reef
Anthozoa
Survival Analysis
Sea surface temperature
climate change
Oceanography
Caribbean Region
CCMI
lcsh:Q
coral reefs
temperature effects
geographic locations
Research Article
Environmental Monitoring
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 19326203
- Volume :
- 5
- Issue :
- 11
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PLoS ONE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....cae867c615dc062726868f50c4b6ad83