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How is global warming responsible for the death of corals?

Posted on 24 March 2009

How is global warming responsible for the death of corals?

Submitted by: Ng Jing Yi




Global warming has increased the temperature of our tropical oceans by about a degree over the last hundred years. This has increased the chance that corals will undergo something called coral bleaching, which is where the plant-like symbionts inside corals (also called zooxanthellae) leave their tissues. The symbionts are important to corals because they give them energy (trapped from our Sun) which they use to grow and maintain themselves. When they bleached, and loose the symbionts, they are more susceptible to disease and death.

Since 1979, there have been six episodes of mass coral bleaching across the planet. There are none reported before 1979. They have all been driven by small stressful temperatures, often only 1-2oC above the long-term summer maxima. In some episodes, such as that that happened in 1998, over 16% of the world’s corals have died. Given that corals build the habitat in which over one million species live, this is a very worrying impact of global warming on the planet’s tropical oceans.

Answer by:
Prof.Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, Director, Centre for Marine Studies, University of Queensland, Australia. Deputy Director, ARC Centre for Excellence in Coral Reef Studies; BLOG: www.climateshifts.org

Comments

Darla White

March 29, 2009 - 00:26

The simple answer is that when the ocean temperature rises one degree celcius above the average temperature, corals bleach. That is, their algal symbionts, zooxanthellae (single celled plants that photosynthesize and provide nutrition for the coral host) leave or are expelled. If the temperatures stay elevated for an extended period of time, and the zooxanthellae do not return, the weakened corals are overgrown by algae and subsequently die. Everything is in competition for space on the reef. In the 1998 bleaching event, 16% of the planet's corals died from that single event. In addition, the ocean absorbs CO2 largely through marine plants (especially the small single celled plants/protists that are known as phytoplankton) and algae. This increase in CO2 in the ocean is changing the pH or the acidity. Many marine organisms, including reef building corals and crustose coralline (reef-cementing) algae are affected by slowed growth and in the future, dissolution. This is ocean acidification. If a reef is not growing, it is eroding. It's like osteoperosis of the sea. When the rate of erosion exceeds the rate of growth, you get reef collapse. The structure that the reef provides is like a city for the organisms that live there. It provides homes, food, jobs, as well as growth and reproductive opportunities. Coral reefs feed a billion people on this planet. They are storehouses for biodiversity, and have been here in all of there grandeur for many thousands of years. Now that we know the consequences of our actions, it is time to change our ways and work to protect these fragile ecosystems to give them a chance at the challenges to come.

 

 

 

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