4.7 Article

Mass coral mortality under local amplification of 2 °C ocean warming

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/srep44586

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Funding

  1. Dongsha Atoll Research Station (DARS)
  2. Dongsha Atoll Marine National Park
  3. National Science Foundation [OCE-1031971, OCE-1605365]
  4. Sustainability Science Research Program of the Academia Sinica
  5. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Coastal Ocean Institute award
  6. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship awarded
  7. Directorate For Geosciences
  8. Division Of Ocean Sciences [1605365] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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A 2 degrees C increase in global temperature above pre-industrial levels is considered a reasonable target for avoiding the most devastating impacts of anthropogenic climate change. In June 2015, sea surface temperature (SST) of the South China Sea (SCS) increased by 2 degrees C in response to the developing Pacific El Nino. On its own, this moderate, short-lived warming was unlikely to cause widespread damage to coral reefs in the region, and the coral reef Bleaching Alertalarm was not raised. However, on Dongsha Atoll, in the northern SCS, unusually weak winds created low-flow conditions that amplified the 2 degrees C basin-scale anomaly. Water temperatures on the reef flat, normally indistinguishable from open-ocean SST, exceeded 6 C-degrees above normal summertime levels. Mass coral bleaching quickly ensued, killing 40% of the resident coral community in an event unprecedented in at least the past 40 years. Our findings highlight the risks of 2 degrees C ocean warming to coral reef ecosystems when global and local processes align to drive intense heating, with devastating consequences.

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