4.8 Article

Climate-change refugia: shading reef corals by turbidity

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 22, 期 3, 页码 1145-1154

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13166

关键词

climate; corals; irradiance; refuges; temperature; turbidity

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Coral reefs have recently experienced an unprecedented decline as the world's oceans continue to warm. Yet global climate models reveal a heterogeneously warming ocean, which has initiated a search for refuges, where corals may survive in the near future. We hypothesized that some turbid nearshore environments may act as climate-change refuges, shading corals from the harmful interaction between high sea-surface temperatures and high irradiance. We took a hierarchical Bayesian approach to determine the expected distribution of 12 coral species in the Indian and Pacific Oceans, between the latitudes 37 degrees N and 37 degrees S, under representative concentration pathway 8.5 (Wm(-2)) by 2100. The turbid nearshore refuges identified in this study were located between latitudes 20-30 degrees N and 15-25 degrees S, where there was a strong coupling between turbidity and tidal fluctuations. Our model predicts that turbidity will mitigate high temperature bleaching for 9% of shallow reef habitat (to 30m depth) - habitat that was previously considered inhospitable under ocean warming. Our model also predicted that turbidity will protect some coral species more than others from climate-change-associated thermal stress. We also identified locations where consistently high turbidity will likely reduce irradiance to <250molm(-2)s(-1), and predict that 16% of reef-coral habitat 30m will preclude coral growth and reef development. Thus, protecting the turbid nearshore refuges identified in this study, particularly in the northwestern Hawaiian Islands, the northern Philippines, the Ryukyu Islands (Japan), eastern Vietnam, western and eastern Australia, New Caledonia, the northern Red Sea, and the Arabian Gulf, should become part of a judicious global strategy for reef-coral persistence under climate change.

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