Marine heatwave impact on corals worse than previously thought

Science

A reef on Kiritimati (Christmas Island) at the end of the 2015-2016 marine heat wave where some Porites lobata colonies survived (yellow/tan colors), some are alive but bleached (white colonies), and some died along with the rest of the reef (red/purple/pink colors of turf algae covering dead colonies). Photo credit: Danielle Claar
A reef on Kiritimati (Christmas Island) at the end of the 2015-2016 marine heat wave where some Porites lobata colonies survived (yellow/tan colors), some are alive but bleached (white colonies), and some died along with the rest of the reef (red/purple/pink colors of turf algae covering dead colonies). Photo credit: Danielle Claar

The effects of marine heatwaves caused by climate change on corals and biodiversity are worse than previously thought, according to new University of Victoria research published on Friday that also provides important clues about broader coral diversity and marine ecosystem health as the world grapples with record ocean temperatures.

The research results come as news media have widely reported unprecedented temperatures in 2023 in places such as Florida. Marine heatwaves threaten cryptic coral diversity and erode associations amongst coevolving partners is written by Julia Baum, professor of ocean ecology and global change at UVic and postdoctoral fellow Samuel Starko, and colleagues from the US. The paper addresses the global effects of an earlier heatwave (the 2015-to-2016 El Niño) on coral.

Starko, a former UVic postdoctoral researcher with Baum’s lab and now at the University of Western Australia, says the study focused on the epicenter of Kiritimati, a coral atoll in the central equatorial Pacific Ocean. It found three genetic lineages among one species of lobed coral and determined they reacted differently to extreme heats.


“Even though the lobed coral appeared to be the most resilient of all coral species, our results demonstrate that one lineage was actually very sensitive and experienced a major reduction in abundance following the heatwave. This highlights how the impacts of extreme events caused by climate change may be even worse than previously thought because they threaten diversity at the genetic level.”
- Samuel Starko, research fellow, University of Western Australia
Baum, a UVic President's Chair and Provost's Engaged Scholar, says such “cryptic diversity” can be important for the functioning of ecosystems, and the paper notes that “reductions in the diversity of genotypes or lineages may limit the capacity for future adaptation that could help corals withstand, for example, disease or the effects of climate change.”

 

A bleached and dying Porites lobata colony on Kiritimati (Christmas Island) after 10 months of heat stress generated from the 2015-2016 El Niño.Photo credit: Julia K. Baum
A bleached and dying Porites lobata colony on Kiritimati (Christmas Island) after 10 months of heat stress generated from the 2015-2016 El Niño. Photo credit: Julia K. Baum

Climate change threatens the world’s coral reefs because corals are highly sensitive to small changes in the temperature of their surrounding waters. During marine heatwaves, corals release the algae that live in their tissues and produce food for them, causing the coral to turn completely white—a phenomenon known as coral bleaching. Prolonged bleaching often causes corals to die from starvation. If they can reclaim their food source within a few weeks, they can usually recover. With global climate models predicting that heatwaves will continue to increase in both frequency and duration, corals’ ability to withstand and recover from bleaching is essential to their survival.

Worldwide, coral reef ecosystems are worth approximately US$375 billion annually, and are a vital source of food and income for hundreds of millions of people in tropical island nations.

Starko says the study’s identification of different coral genotypes highlights the potential for increasing coral reef resilience to threats. “There has been an increasing push to use targeted genotypes to restore and future-proof marine ecosystems, including coral reefs,” he says. “If we can identify genotypes that are more resilient to heat stress then we can strategically outplant them to increase the overall resilience of reefs in the face of climate change.”

But Baum notes that alone isn’t enough to protect corals and ocean biodiversity, saying: “We need to rapidly reduce greenhouse gas emissions to curb planetary warming. The current warming in Florida underscores that the ocean is simply becoming too hot for corals, and we need to act now to mitigate climate change.”

Read the paper by Baum, Starko and colleagues in the journal Science Advances.

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 A media kit containing high-resolution photos is available on Dropbox.


Media contacts:
Julia Baum (Dept. of Biology) at 250-858-9349 or
Jennifer Kwan (University Communications + Marketing) at 250-721-7641 or

About the University of Victoria
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Media contacts

Julia Baum (Biology) at 250-858-9349 or baum@uvic.ca

Jennifer Kwan (University Communications + Marketing) at 250-721-7641 or uvicnews@uvic.ca

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Keywords: People Place Planet, community, international, sustainability, administrative, sustainable development goals, climate action, life below water, climate, environment, sustainability, oceans, funding, biodiversity

People: Julia Baum


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