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Climate change forces world’s coral reefs to undergo fourth global mass bleaching event

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Alexa St. John

Coral reefs around the world are experienci­ng global bleaching for the fourth time, top reef scientists declared on Monday, a result of warming ocean waters amid human-caused climate change.

Coral reef bleaching across at least 53 countries, territorie­s or local economies has been con rmed from February 2023 to now, scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion (NOAA) and Internatio­nal Coral Reef Initiative said. It happens when stressed coral expel the algae that are their food source and give them their colour. If the bleaching is severe and long-lasting, the coral can die.

Coral reefs are important ecosystems that sustain underwater life, protect biodiversi­ty and slow erosion. They also support local economies through tourism.

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Bleaching has been happening in various regions for some time. In the world's largest coral reef ecosystem, Australia's Great Barrier Reef, bleaching a ected 90 per cent of the coral assessed in 2022. The Florida Coral Reef, the third-largest, experience­d signi - cant bleaching last year.

But in order for bleaching to be declared on a global scale, signi cant bleaching had to be documented within each of the major ocean basins, including the Atlantic, Paci c, and Indian oceans, in both the Northern and Southern Hemisphere­s.

The second worldwide bleaching event in the last decade

Monday's news marks the second worldwide bleaching event in the last 10 years. The last one ended in May 2017. Brought on by a powerful El Nino climate pattern that heated the world's oceans, it lasted three years and was determined to be worse than the prior two bleaching events in 2010 and 1998.

This year's bleaching follows the declaratio­n that 2023 was the hottest year on record.

“As the world’s oceans continue to warm, coral bleaching is becoming more frequent and severe,” Derek Manzello, NOAA Coral Reef Watch coordinato­r, said in a statement.

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Selina Stead, a marine biologist and chief executive of the Australian Institute of Marine Science, called climate change “the biggest threat to coral reefs worldwide”. She said scientists are working to learn more about how coral responds to heat and to identify naturally heat-tolerant corals, but said it is “critical the world works to reduce carbon emissions”.

One reef that fared better than others last year was the Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary, which was afforded some protection by its location in deeper water in the Gulf of Mexico about 160 km o the Texas coast. Sanctuary o cials didn't immediatel­y respond to messages Monday seeking the latest on the health of the sanctuary's corals.

 ?? ?? In this image provide by NOAA, a   sh swims near coral showing signs of bleaching at Cheeca Rocks o   the coast of Islamorada, Florida, July 2023.
In this image provide by NOAA, a sh swims near coral showing signs of bleaching at Cheeca Rocks o the coast of Islamorada, Florida, July 2023.

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