| Literature DB >> 32778666 |
Curt D Storlazzi1, Olivia M Cheriton2, Ruben van Hooidonk3, Zhongxiang Zhao4, Russell Brainard5.
Abstract
Observations show ocean temperatures are rising due to climate change, resulting in a fivefold increase in the incidence of regional-scale coral bleaching events since the 1980s; analyses based on global climate models forecast bleaching will become an annual event for most of the world's coral reefs within 30-50 yr. Internal waves at tidal frequencies can regularly flush reefs with cooler waters, buffering the thermal stress from rising sea-surface temperatures. Here we present the first global maps of the effects these processes have on bleaching projections for three IPCC-AR5 emissions scenarios. Incorporating semidiurnal temperature fluctuations into the projected water temperatures at depth creates a delay in the timing of annual severe bleaching ≥ 10 yr (≥ 20 yr) for 38% (9%), 15% (1%), and 1% (0%) of coral reef sites for the low, moderate, and high emission scenarios, respectively; regional averages can reach twice as high. These cooling effects are greatest later in twenty-first century for the moderate emission scenarios, and around the middle twenty-first century for the highest emission scenario. Our results demonstrate how these effects could delay bleaching for corals, providing thermal refugia. Identification of such areas could be a factor for the selection of coral reef marine protected areas.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32778666 PMCID: PMC7417736 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-70372-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1Locations of coral reefs, internal tide amplitude, and example of in situ and modeled data from a reef site. (A) Map showing the locations of coral reefs and the geographic regions defined here from the merged reefbase/UNEP-WCMC and Millennium Coral Reef Mapping Project reefs database (https://imars.usf.edu/MC/index.html), with the total number of reef sites and the number of in situ observations for each region in parentheses. (B) Map showing the Zhao et al. (2016) open ocean, mode-1, semidiurnal (M2 + S2) internal tide amplitude in gray shading, with the 233 in situ temperature sites overlaid (red dots). The green star shows the location of a representative site on Kure Atoll in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. (C) The in situ temperature (‘T at 26 m’) from the Kure Atoll site and the co-located Pathfinder sea surface temperature (SST) measured in 2014, when extensive coral bleaching occurred in many locations in the NWHI (Couch et al. 2017); the seasonal envelope from the mean monthly climatology is displayed with cyan shading, with the upper bound being SST and the lower bound the temperature at the depth given by the site depth plus the model amplitude. NOAA’s Coral Reef Watch NWHI virtual monitoring station bleaching alerts are shown along the bottom of C, where level 1 (orange) indicates significant bleaching is expected and level 2 (pink) indicates wide-spread bleaching and coral mortality are expected. Throughout the extensive bleaching event, semidiurnal-period fluctuations drove temperature decreases of up to 4 °C. The synthetic semidiurnal temperature has a smaller overall temperature decrease but systematically more chronic exposure.
Figure 2Map showing coral reef locations and the projected delay (∆) in the Year of Annual Severe Bleaching (YASB) for different Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) scenarios. (A) RCP4.5. (B) RCP6.0. (C) RCP8.5. ∆YASB is the difference between YASB for sea-surface temperature (SST) projections and YASB with site-specific semidiurnal (M2 + S2) temperature fluctuations for coral reef sites at 20-m depths. Sites that are outside the range of the global, mode-1 internal tide observations (Zhao et al. 2016) and sites that never reach YASBSST by 2090 are omitted. For many sites, ∆YASB attributed to semidiurnal temperature fluctuations is small (< 10 yr); however, for some reefs, the delay can be on the order of decades. The thermal benefit provided by the subsurface temperature fluctuations decreases for higher emission scenarios such as RCP8.5.
Figure 3Distribution the number of coral reef sites at 10-, 20-, and 30-m depths experiencing a delay (∆) in projected Year of Annual Severe Bleaching (YASB). Left panels (A–C): percentage of reef sites for different annual ranges in ∆YASB through 2090. Center panels (D–F): cumulative percentage of reef sites that reach YASB by each year for reefs at depth and exposed to semidiurnal temperature fluctuations (solid lines) and depth-only (dashed lines) to highlight the effects of the semidiurnal temperature fluctuations; the difference between the lines is the ∆YASB. Right panels (G–I): Difference in the cumulative percentages that are shown in center panels between the scenarios that only include depth (dashed lines in D–F) and those that include both depth and semidiurnal temperature fluctuations (solid lines in D–F). Each row presents a different Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) scenario: top is RCP4.5, middle is RCP6.0, and bottom is RCP8.5. For all plots, only reef sites that have a corresponding mode-1 internal tide amplitude and also reach YASB due to SST before 2090 are considered (n = total number). Semidiurnal temperature fluctuations provide a cooling benefit to corals at 10–20-m depths; however, for 30-m depths, the limited annual temperature range makes the coral highly sensitive to temperature variations. The contribution of semidiurnal fluctuations to cooling is greatest later in the century for the RCP4.5 and 6.5 scenarios, but during the middle of the century for RCP8.5.
Figure 4The percentile distribution in delay (∆) in projected Year of Annual Severe Bleaching (YASB) compared to YASB for sea-surface temperature (SST) alone for coral reef sites by depth for different Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) scenarios, grouped by geographic region. (A–C) RCP4.5. (D–F) RCP6.0. (G–I) RCP8.5. Depths are by row: 10-m (top row), 20-m (middle row), and 30-m (bottom row). For all plots, only reef sites that have a corresponding mode-1 internal tide amplitude and also reach YASB due to SST by 2090, the latest year possible with global climate models, are considered (n = total number). The regions are: Indian Ocean (IN; n = 80 (RCP4.5), 87 (RCP6.0), 146 (RCP8.5)), Coral Triangle (CT; n = 1,300, 156, 220), South China Sea (SC; n = 6, 20, 30), North Pacific Ocean (NP; n = 107, 136, 156), South Pacific Ocean (SP; n = 160, 227, 271), Eastern Pacific (EP; n = 9, 8, 17), Intra-Americas Sea (IA; n = 0, 2, 73), and Atlantic Ocean (AT; n = 2, 8, 8). Gray colors indicate negative values, and in cases where n < 5, the region is left blank. See Fig. 1 for the locations of the regions.