Literature DB >> 31472029

Refugia under threat: Mass bleaching of coral assemblages in high-latitude eastern Australia.

Sun W Kim1, Eugenia M Sampayo1, Brigitte Sommer1,2, Carrie A Sims1, Maria Del C Gómez-Cabrera1, Steve J Dalton1, Maria Beger3,4, Hamish A Malcolm5, Renata Ferrari2,6, Nicola Fraser7, Will F Figueira2, Stephen D A Smith8, Scott F Heron9,10, Andrew H Baird11, Maria Byrne12, C Mark Eakin10, Robert Edgar7, Terry P Hughes11, Nicole Kyriacou1, Gang Liu10,13, Paloma A Matis14, William J Skirving10, John M Pandolfi1.   

Abstract

Environmental anomalies that trigger adverse physiological responses and mortality are occurring with increasing frequency due to climate change. At species' range peripheries, environmental anomalies are particularly concerning because species often exist at their environmental tolerance limits and may not be able to migrate to escape unfavourable conditions. Here, we investigated the bleaching response and mortality of 14 coral genera across high-latitude eastern Australia during a global heat stress event in 2016. We evaluated whether the severity of assemblage-scale and genus-level bleaching responses was associated with cumulative heat stress and/or local environmental history, including long-term mean temperatures during the hottest month of each year (SSTLTMAX ), and annual fluctuations in water temperature (SSTVAR ) and solar irradiance (PARZVAR ). The most severely-bleached genera included species that were either endemic to the region (Pocillopora aliciae) or rare in the tropics (e.g. Porites heronensis). Pocillopora spp., in particular, showed high rates of immediate mortality. Bleaching severity of Pocillopora was high where SSTLTMAX was low or PARZVAR was high, whereas bleaching severity of Porites was directly associated with cumulative heat stress. While many tropical Acropora species are extremely vulnerable to bleaching, the Acropora species common at high latitudes, such as A. glauca and A. solitaryensis, showed little incidence of bleaching and immediate mortality. Two other regionally-abundant genera, Goniastrea and Turbinaria, were also largely unaffected by the thermal anomaly. The severity of assemblage-scale bleaching responses was poorly explained by the environmental parameters we examined. Instead, the severity of assemblage-scale bleaching was associated with local differences in species abundance and taxon-specific bleaching responses. The marked taxonomic disparity in bleaching severity, coupled with high mortality of high-latitude endemics, point to climate-driven simplification of assemblage structures and progressive homogenisation of reef functions at these high-latitude locations.
© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  climate change; coral bleaching; environmental determinants of coral bleaching; range dynamics; subtropical reef

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31472029     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14772

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  3 in total

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Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-05-09       Impact factor: 17.694

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Authors:  Katie M Cook; Hirotaka Yamagiwa; Maria Beger; Giovanni Diego Masucci; Stuart Ross; Hui Yian Theodora Lee; Rick D Stuart-Smith; James Davis Reimer
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2022-03-22       Impact factor: 2.912

3.  Past the Precipice? Projected Coral Habitability Under Global Heating.

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  3 in total

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