Warmer oceans damaging coral 5 times more often than in 1980s: research
Coral bleaching used to occur every 25–30 years, now it's every 5–6
High ocean temperatures are harming tropical corals almost five times more often than in the 1980s, undermining reefs' ability to survive marine heat waves caused by man-made climate change, scientists said on Thursday.
The average time between severe "bleachings," when heat makes the stony-bodied creatures that make up coral reefs expel colourful algae, shortened to six years in 2016 from 25–30 years in the early 1980s, the Australian-led team wrote.
Corals die if bleachings are long-lasting, wrecking reefs that are nurseries for fish, a source of food to millions of people and a destination for scuba-diving tourists.
"Tropical reef systems are transitioning to a new era in which the interval between recurrent bouts of coral bleaching is too short for a full recovery" of mature corals that can require 10–15 years, the researchers, which included one from the University of Victoria, wrote in the journal Science.
The worst bleaching was in 2015–16, when record ocean temperatures affected 75 per cent of 100 reefs studied from Australia's Great Barrier Reef to the Caribbean.
More greenhouse gas reductions needed
Lead author Professor Terry Hughes, director of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies in Australia, urged more action to limit greenhouse gas emissions under the global 2015 Paris climate agreement.
The main problem for protecting reefs was "weak commitments for reductions in emissions from individual countries like Australia and the U.S.," he told Reuters in an e-mail.
U.S. President Donald Trump, who has said he doubts climate change is man-made, plans to pull out of the Paris accord and instead promote U.S. fossil fuels. Australia's goals under the Paris accord are less ambitious than those of some other rich nations.
The Paris pact seeks to limit a rise in average global surface temperatures to "well below" two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial times, ideally 1.5 C by shifting from fossil fuels.
In the 1980s, bleachings happened during local heat waves, and then started to occur through the 1990s during natural El Nino weather events that release heat from the Pacific Ocean.
"Now we're seeing the emergence of bleaching in every hot summer," said Mark Eakin, an author of the study at the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said in a statement.
Hughes said there was evidence that some corals could adapt to rising temperatures. The Great Barrier Reef, the world's biggest, was not doomed if governments stepped up action.
"If the ... Paris Agreement is successful we will still have a Great Barrier Reef. It will have a different mix of coral species, but it will still function and look like a reef," he said.