Divers for the Environment September 2021

Page 26

REEF CHECK

GLOBAL STUDY USES REEF CHECK DATA

TO SHOW REEF CORALS SURVIVE BLEACHING

WHEN LESS ALGAE ARE PRESENT

A new study published today in the journal Science, suggests that reducing the amount of algae growing on coral reefs could help them survive bleaching events caused by global warming. Coral reef scientists and resource managers have grown increasingly alarmed as reefs around the world have been repeatedly hit by periods of hotter-than-normal seawater that have caused corals to “bleach” and die.

volunteer citizen scientists. The study analysed the relationships among physical and biological variables such as heat stress, water depth, and the numbers of certain fish, sea urchins or algae with the amount of living coral left on reefs one year after a coral bleaching event. Not surprisingly, the greater the heat stress, the less coral survived in the year following bleaching, consistent with previous studies.

For example, in the last five years alone, three major bleaching events have killed some 50% of the corals on the 1,400-mile long Great Barrier Reef in Australia. Annual maximum seawater temperatures have increased globally due to climate change, and reefs in few countries have been spared.

A key finding was that on reefs with a low percentage of the seabed covered by types of algae called macro-algae, more coral survived a year after a bleaching event than on reefs with a high percentage of the reef occupied by macro-algae. According to the lead author, Mary Donovan, from Arizona State University, “This result is important because it suggests that by keeping macro-algae abundance low from actions such as reducing high nutrient inputs to reefs and maintaining sufficient

The new study analysed Reef Check data collected at over 200 reefs throughout the tropical world between 1998 and 2017 by 26

DIVERS FOR THE ENVIRONMENT | SEPTEMBER 2021

populations of fish that eat algae, it should be possible to reduce damage from moderate heat-stress events.” While it has long been known that macro-algae compete for space with corals on reefs and can kill corals directly by overgrowing them or by being toxic to corals, this study is the first to demonstrate on a global scale that lowering the amount of macro-algae on reefs could be a tool that can be used by local reef managers to help corals survive bleaching events. “This is great news for coral reef managers because they can act on the local level to help corals survive,” stated Jan Freiwald, Executive Director of Reef Check Foundation. “We are really pleased that our 20-year dataset on coral reefs from over 100 countries has been the basis for this collaborative study involving coral reef scientists from US NOAA and four universities.”


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

DAN Europe

1min
page 78

HEALTH

7min
pages 76-77

Zanzibar

19min
pages 64-75

Equipment Review

5min
pages 60-63

My Buddy

7min
pages 56-59

The Eyes are the Window to the Soul

5min
pages 52-55

Deep Dive Dubai

11min
pages 34-41

Feature Creature

13min
pages 30-33

Artificial Reefs

13min
pages 46-51

The Value of a 20-Year Coral Reef Dataset

4min
page 29

Dreamscape

4min
pages 42-45

Reef Check Malaysia

4min
page 28

Reef Check Kelp Forest Programme

3min
page 27

Reef Check Data

2min
page 26

PADI Launches New Job Board

2min
page 19

Dubai 92 Coral Reef Conservation

2min
pages 22-25

PADI Positions Membership as Mission Hubs

3min
page 18

PADI and the Ocean Cleanup Join Forces

2min
page 17

EAD to Continue Marine Scientific Research

4min
page 16

My Diving Experience

2min
page 21

EAD and Wetlands International Launch New Online Portal

4min
page 15

Welcoming the World

4min
page 10

Dugong and Seagrass Toolkit

4min
page 11

The EPAA of Sharjah and Zayed University

4min
pages 8-9

EDA Director’s Note

2min
page 5

EAD Uses Satellites to Track Three Rehabilitated Turtles

4min
page 14

A Virtual EDA Movie Screening

10min
pages 6-7

Largest Coral Reef Rehabilitation Project in the Region

4min
page 12

EAD Improves Marine Water Quality

4min
page 13
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.