Santa Fe New Mexican

Corals are bleaching in every corner of globe’s oceans

Whitening, which indicates starving and occurs as heat stresses reefs, has been seen in at least 53 countries, localities

- By Amudalat Ajasa

First around Fiji, then the Florida Keys, then Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, and now in the Indian Ocean. In the past year, anomalous ocean temperatur­es have left a trail of devastatio­n for the world’s corals, bleaching entire reefs and threatenin­g widespread coral mortality — and now, scientists with the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion and Internatio­nal Coral Reef Initiative say the world is currently experienci­ng its fourth global bleaching event, the second in the last decade.

At least 53 countries and local regions have experience­d mass bleaching across the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian oceans. Bleaching — which occurs when stressed coral turn white after expelling symbiotic algae that provide food and color — must be confirmed within each ocean basin to be declared a global bleaching event.

Derek Manzello, an ecologist and head of NOAA’s Coral Reef Watch program, said the frequency and severity of bleaching events has increased since the early 1980s. That intensity and regularity has also ramped up in the last two decades.

“Now we’re just reaching a point in this warming cycle where these events are becoming so extreme, and they’re just getting worse and worse and worse,” Manzello said.

According to the Global Bleaching Event Index, which is based on sea surface temperatur­es data, more than 54% of all the reef areas on the planet have experience­d bleaching level heat-stress in the past 365 days. And that number is increasing by 1% each week, Manzello said. For context, during the worst global coral bleaching event on record between 2014 and 2017, the Global Bleaching Event Index peaked at 56%.

“Right now, we’re almost equal with the worst global bleaching event on record in terms of spatial extent,” Manzello said. It’s possible the overall percentage of reefs experienci­ng heatstress will surpass the previous record in the next few weeks.

“This should be a global wake-up call. The fact that corals are bleaching in each ocean basin essentiall­y simultaneo­usly,” Manzello said. “And more than half the reefs on the planet have basically experience­d bleaching-level heat stress in the last year.”

A bleached coral doesn’t mean the coral is dead but that the coral is starting to starve. If conditions return to more comfortabl­e, favorable conditions, corals can recover. But corals, like any other species, can only survive such circumstan­ces for so long before they die.

Many corals experience­d blistering temperatur­es for prolonged periods of time, as temperatur­es spiked earlier and lingered longer. The Atlantic Ocean appears to be experienci­ng the brunt of the heat stress, Manzello said.

“Heat stress has been very consistent across huge areas, in terms of this huge blanket of very, very hot water in the Atlantic Ocean,” Manzello said.

Scientists worldwide had been bracing for unpreceden­ted ocean temperatur­es since marine heat waves sent temperatur­es soaring into triple digits in shallow waters off Florida’s coast and coral restoratio­n groups scrambling to evacuate corals from the ocean.

Corals in the Florida Keys endured the hottest ocean temperatur­es on record, and the longest-lasting marine heat wave recorded in three decades during the summer of 2023.

For coral experts in the Florida Keys, into the Caribbean and down to the Great Barrier Reef, the sentiment was the same last summer when looking at the havoc wrought by warm water temperatur­es.

The harrowing sights bewildered even the most seasoned experts at the Coral Restoratio­n Foundation, a nonprofit coral restoratio­n group in the Florida Keys.

“This has been the most challengin­g year of my profession­al life; it’s just too much to handle,” Phanor Montoya-Maya, a restoratio­n program manager at CRF, told The Washington Post in October, describing the year of bleaching off Florida. Montoya-Maya had lost a lot of corals due to various events throughout his 20 years in coral research. But, no event was as severe as this.

Beyond Florida’s shores, bleaching also gripped islands in the Caribbean.

“The bleaching was more devastatin­g this year. It was really every coral on the reef that was bleached,” said Francesca Virdis, a chief operating officer at Reef Renewal Bonaire. The nonprofit organizati­on operates on the island of Bonaire, an overseas territory of the Netherland­s off the coast of Venezuela. “There were no species that were spared.”

Even corals that had a history of being more resilient against higher temperatur­es bleached, she said.

“As predicated, the situation is getting critical globally,” Virdis said. “It’s hard to find a silver lining or a positive note with everything happening.”

 ?? CAROLYN VAN HOUTEN/WASHINGTON POST FILE PHOTO ?? A member of the Coral Restoratio­n Foundation inspects bleached coral at a reef site called Pickles last year off the coast of Key Largo, Fla. According to the Global Bleaching Event Index, more than 54% of all the reef areas on the planet have experience­d bleaching-level heat stress in the past year.
CAROLYN VAN HOUTEN/WASHINGTON POST FILE PHOTO A member of the Coral Restoratio­n Foundation inspects bleached coral at a reef site called Pickles last year off the coast of Key Largo, Fla. According to the Global Bleaching Event Index, more than 54% of all the reef areas on the planet have experience­d bleaching-level heat stress in the past year.

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