San Diego Union-Tribune

TEMPERATUR­ES HIT HOT TUB LEVEL IN SOUTH FLA. WATERS

Readings this week may have set world seawater record

- BY SETH BORENSTEIN Borenstein writes for The Associated Press.

The water temperatur­e around the tip of Florida hit triple digits — hot tub levels — two days in a row. Meteorolog­ists say it could be the hottest seawater ever measured, although some questions about the reading remain.

Scientists are already seeing devastatin­g effects from prolonged hot water surroundin­g Florida — coral bleaching and even the death of some corals in what had been one of the Florida Keys’ most resilient reefs. Climate change has set temperatur­e records across the globe this month.

The warmer water is also fuel for hurricanes.

Scientists were careful to say there is some uncertaint­y with the reading. But the buoy at Manatee Bay hit 101.1 degrees Fahrenheit Monday evening, according to National Weather Service meteorolog­ist George Rizzuto. The night before, that buoy showed an online reading of 100.2 degrees.

“That is a potential record,” Rizzuto said.

“This is a hot tub. I like my hot tub around 100, 101. That’s what was recorded yesterday,” Yale Climate Connection­s meteorolog­ist Jeff Masters said Tuesday.

If verified, the Monday reading would be nearly 1.5 degrees higher than what is regarded as the prior record, set in the waters off Kuwait three summers ago, 99.7 degrees.

“We’ve never seen a record-breaking event like this before,” Masters said.

The consequenc­es for sea corals are serious. NOAA researcher Andrew Ibarra, who took his kayak out to the area, “found that the entire reef was bleached out. Every single coral colony was exhibiting some form of paling, partial bleaching or full out bleaching.”

Some coral even had died, he said. This comes on top of bleaching seen last week by the University of Miami, when NOAA increased the alert level for coral.

Until the 1980s, coral bleaching was mostly unheard of. But “now we’ve reached the point where it’s become routine,” said Ian Enochs, lead of the coral program at the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion Atlantic Oceanograp­hic and Meteorolog­ical Laboratory. Bleaching, which doesn’t kill coral but weakens it and can lead to death, occurs when water temperatur­es exceed the upper 80s, Enochs said.

Masters and University of Miami tropical meteorolog­ist Brian McNoldy said while the hot temperatur­es do fit with what’s happening around Florida, Monday’s reading may not be accepted as a record because the area is shallow, has sea grasses in it and may be influenced by warm land in the nearby Everglades National Park.

Still, McNoldy said, “it’s amazing.”

The fact that two 100-degree measuremen­ts were taken on consecutiv­e days lends credence to them, McNoldy said. Water temperatur­es have been in the upper 90s in the area for more than two weeks.

There aren’t many coral reefs in Manatee Bay, but elsewhere in the Florida Keys, scientists diving at Cheeca Rocks found bleaching and even death in some of the Keys’ most resilient corals, said Enochs.

“This is more, earlier than we have ever seen,” Enochs said. “I’m nervous by how early this is occurring.”

This all comes as sea surface temperatur­es worldwide have broken monthly records for heat in April, May and June, according to NOAA. And temperatur­es in the north Atlantic Ocean are off the charts — as much as 9 to 11 degrees warmer than normal in some spots near Newfoundla­nd, McNoldy said.

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