Mass coral bleaching in 2010 in the southern Caribbean

Ocean temperatures are increasing globally and the Caribbean is no exception. An extreme ocean warming event in 2010 placed Tobago's coral reefs under severe stress resulting in widespread coral bleaching and threatening the livelihoods that rely on them. The bleaching response of four reef bui...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2014-01, Vol.9 (1), p.e83829
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description Ocean temperatures are increasing globally and the Caribbean is no exception. An extreme ocean warming event in 2010 placed Tobago's coral reefs under severe stress resulting in widespread coral bleaching and threatening the livelihoods that rely on them. The bleaching response of four reef building taxa was monitored over a six month period across three major reefs systems in Tobago. By identifying taxa resilient to bleaching we propose to assist local coral reef managers in the decision making process to cope with mass bleaching events. The bleaching signal (length of exposure to high ocean temperatures) varied widely between the Atlantic and Caribbean reefs, but regardless of this variation most taxa bleached. Colpophyllia natans, Montastraea faveolata and Siderastrea siderea were considered the most bleaching vulnerable taxa. Interestingly, reefs with the highest coral cover showed the greatest decline reef building taxa, and conversely, reefs with the lowest coral cover showed the most bleaching but lowest change in coral cover with little algal overgrowth post-bleaching.
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subjects Algae
Animals
Anthozoa
Biodiversity
Biology
Caribbean Region
Climate change
Coral bleaching
Coral Reefs
Decision making
Earth sciences
Ecology
Ecosystem
Ecosystems
Environmental Monitoring
Epidemics
Mortality
Ocean temperature
Ocean warming
Oceanography
Oceans
Salinity
Scleractinia
Signal processing
Taxa
Temperature
title Mass coral bleaching in 2010 in the southern Caribbean
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