Long-term impacts of rising sea temperature and sea level on shallow water coral communities over a similar to 40 year period

Journal Article (2019)
Author(s)

Barbara E. Brown (University of the Highlands and Islands, Newcastle University)

R. P. Dunne (Barnard Castle, Co. Durham)

P. J. Somerfield (Plymouth Marine Laboratory)

A. J. Edwards (Newcastle University)

W.J.F. Simons (TU Delft - Astrodynamics & Space Missions)

N. Phongsuwan

L. Putchim (Phuket Marine Biological Center)

L. Anderson (University of Leeds)

M.C. Naeije (TU Delft - Astrodynamics & Space Missions)

Astrodynamics & Space Missions
Copyright
© 2019 B. E. Brown, R. P. Dunne, P. J. Somerfield, A. J. Edwards, W.J.F. Simons, N. Phongsuwan, L. Putchim, L. Anderson, M.C. Naeije
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-45188-x
More Info
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Publication Year
2019
Language
English
Copyright
© 2019 B. E. Brown, R. P. Dunne, P. J. Somerfield, A. J. Edwards, W.J.F. Simons, N. Phongsuwan, L. Putchim, L. Anderson, M.C. Naeije
Astrodynamics & Space Missions
Issue number
1
Volume number
9
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Abstract

Effects of combined rising sea temperature and increasing sea level on coral reefs, both factors associated with global warming, have rarely been addressed. In this ~40 y study of shallow reefs in the eastern Indian Ocean, we show that a rising relative sea level, currently estimated at ~11 mm y−1, has not only promoted coral cover but also has potential to limit damaging effects of thermally-induced bleaching. In 2010 the region experienced the most severe bleaching on record with corals subject to sea temperatures of >31 °C for 7 weeks. While the reef flats studied have a common aspect and are dominated by a similar suite of coral species, there was considerable spatial variation in their bleaching response which corresponded with reef-flat depth. Greatest loss of coral cover and community structure disruption occurred on the shallowest reef flats. Damage was less severe on the deepest reef flat where corals were subject to less aerial exposure, rapid flushing and longer submergence in turbid waters. Recovery of the most damaged sites took only ~8 y. While future trajectories of these resilient reefs will depend on sea-level anomalies, and frequency of extreme bleaching the positive role of rising sea level should not be under-estimated.