The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Coral so stressed scientists need new scale

Bleaching surpassed old alerts as oceans warmed.

- By Amudalat Ajasa Washington Post

For more than a decade, marine experts have relied on an alert scale from the National Oceanograp­hic Atmospheri­c Administra­tion to signal how much stress ocean heat is putting on corals and what risk there is for bleaching. The highest on the two-scale system, Bleaching Alert Level 2, has for years represente­d coral catastroph­e. That has sufficed — until last summer.

A blistering marine heat wave along Florida’s 360-mile-long reef pushed water temperatur­es to previously unseen levels: from mid-to-high 90 degrees Fahrenheit, with some shallow waters reaching temperatur­es above 100 degrees. Some locations experience­d complete reef bleaching and forced restoratio­n groups to pull some corals out of the water.

The unpreceden­ted event forced NOAA to add three new alert levels to account for higher mortality rates and bleaching levels. The previous levels were no longer doing an adequate job of showing how extreme the heat stress impacts were on the coral reefs, said Derek Manzello, an ecologist and head of NOAA’s Coral Reef Watch program.

“What happened last year was really unexpected and off the charts,” Manzello said. “We knew there were going to be more bleaching events because of ocean warming. We knew they were going to become more severe. What we didn’t anticipate happening was such a severe event happening so early in time.”

The new system aims to give a better sense of how coral reefs respond to extreme heat. When corals are stressed, they release algae — which provide them with food and color — and turn pale or white. A bleached coral doesn’t mean the coral is dead, but rather that they are more vulnerable and can die.

The new most extreme category, Bleaching Alert Level 5, signals near-complete coral mortality, when at least 80 percent of corals in an area are experienci­ng mortality due to prolonged exposure to extreme temperatur­es.

A Bleaching Alert Level 5 is five times the amount of heat stress of the first level, Bleaching Alert Level 1, which signals significan­t bleaching.

Manzello compared that highest level to a Category 5 hurricane. It denotes that they “expect drastic, severe and long-lasting impacts on coral reefs,” he said.

The new Bleaching Alert Level 3 is associated with risk of multispeci­es mortality; and Bleaching Alert Level 4 is associated with severe, multispeci­es mortality -- 50 percent of corals or more.

Under the old system, Florida and most of the Caribbean were deemed Alert Level 2 for over three months last summer. Under the new system, the Florida Keys would have reached a level 4 and 5, and the Caribbean would have been declared a level 5, Manzello said.

For coral restoratio­n managers, the extended alert system serves as a more nuanced tool to better predict different warm water impacts on corals.

“Unfortunat­ely, we weren’t prepared for how severe (temperatur­es were going to be),” said Stephanie Schopmeyer, associate research scientist with Florida Fish and Wildlife. “These new alert levels will help prepare us for more severe events.”

But the new alerts also serve as a warning for what water conditions could look in the future.

“It’s almost like last year was a wake-up call,” Schopmeyer said. “We can’t ignore climate change.”

The new alert system increases the limit for degree-heating weeks, which measures weeks when water temperatur­es are at least 1 degree Celsius above the average summertime maximum. Coral bleaching starts at around four degree-heating weeks — four weeks where temperatur­es are 1 degree Celsius above maximum averages. Coral mortality starts at around eight degree-heating weeks — where the old alert system ended. The new scale fills in the gaps from where the last scale ended.

“We know bleaching events are going to increase in frequency, severity and magnitude, because that’s exactly what’s happened over the last 40 years,” Manzello said. “If events like this become commonplac­e, coral reefs are going to have a very challengin­g time surviving in the next 20 years or so.”

The bleaching occurred in 2023 as the global air and sea temperatur­es surged to records. Scientists say the warmth is the result of rising concentrat­ions of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels as well as the El Niño climate pattern characteri­zed by abnormally warm ocean waters in the tropical Pacific.

Forecaster­s at the National Weather Service recently issued a La Niña watch — the opposite of El Niño — to develop by August. La Niña is characteri­zed by colder-than-normal temperatur­es in the Pacific and encouragin­g destructiv­e Atlantic hurricane seasons.

La Niña could provide a much-needed cool relief for the world’s coral reefs, although mass bleaching events during La Niña have recently occurred on the Great Barrier Reef in 2022 and Fiji in 2023, Manzello said.

But the impending flip from a historical­ly strong El Niño could negate some of the cooler conditions brought by La Niña, said Cynthia Lewis, director of the Florida Institute of Oceanograp­hy’s Keys Marine Laboratory.

“It may be a very warm La Niña and not necessaril­y cooler like we like it.”

 ?? CAROLYN VAN HOUTEN/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Key Largo and the rest of the Florida Keys reached level 4 or 5 for coral bleaching, with extreme stress because of ocean warming.
CAROLYN VAN HOUTEN/THE WASHINGTON POST Key Largo and the rest of the Florida Keys reached level 4 or 5 for coral bleaching, with extreme stress because of ocean warming.

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