Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumRemote, Heavly Protected HI Reefs Bleached In 2014; Expect Loss Of All US Reefs In Decades
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Cobb said regular annual bleaching events, which recent research has forecast happening by the 2040s, will undercut the resilience of these ecosystems. Corals not killed off by bleaching are left weakened by the process and are less likely to survive if repeatedly subjected to above-average temperatures. As scientists we are breathlessly trying to catch up, said Cobb. Things started to run away from us around 10 years ago but we were perhaps a little naive in not realizing that.
In 2014 and 2015, Hawaiis coral reefs suffered up to 90% bleaching, with some areas losing half of their coral cover. New research now shows that even one of the most protected parts of the Hawaiian coast was ravaged by coral bleaching.
Surveys of the Hanauma Bay nature preserve, a protected enclave on Oahu where fishing is banned, found 47% of the areas corals experienced bleaching on average, with nearly 10% dying. Hanauma Bay is popular with tourists, with around 3,000 visitors each day, but the research stressed that the heat of the ocean rather than direct human interference caused the coral loss.
This is a protected place and yet its not able to escape the temperature, said Angela Richards Dona of the Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology and a co-author of the report which was based on surveys taken in October 2015 and January 2016 and published in PeerJ. It was very distressing to see. It does not bode well for Hawaiis corals.
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https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/may/30/us-coral-reefs-global-warming-climate-change
greymattermom
(5,754 posts)And if this happens in the Florida Keys, won't they be completely lost during the next hurricane?
hatrack
(59,587 posts)We already do in Florida and North Carolina and New Jersey.