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Coral bleaching pathways under the control of regional temperature variability

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-19, 17:27 authored by Langlais, CE, Lenton, A, Heron, SF, Evenhuis, C, Sen Gupta, A, Brown, JN, Kuchinke, M
Increasing sea surface temperatures (SSTs) are predicted to adversely impact coral populations worldwide through increasing thermal bleaching events. Future bleaching is unlikely to be spatially uniform. Therefore, understanding what determines regional differences will be critical for adaptation management. Here, using a cumulative heat stress metric, we show that characteristics of regional SST determine the future bleaching risk patterns. Incorporating observed information on SST variability, in assessing future bleaching risk, provides novel options for management strategies. As a consequence, the known biases in climate model variability and the uncertainties in regional warming rate across climate models are less detrimental than previously thought. We also show that the thresholds used to indicate reef viability can strongly influence a decision on what constitutes a potential refugia. Observing and understanding the drivers of regional variability, and the viability limits of coral reefs, is therefore critical for making meaningful projections of coral bleaching risk.

History

Publication title

Nature Climate Change

Volume

7

Issue

11

Pagination

839-844

ISSN

1758-678X

Department/School

Tasmanian Institute of Agriculture (TIA)

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Place of publication

United Kingdom

Rights statement

Copyright 2017 Macmillan Publishers Limited, part of Springer Nature

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Expanding knowledge in the environmental sciences

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