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Experiments find coral reefs can survive some climate change, with help

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A new University of Hawai‘i study shows coral reefs have the potential to persist and adapt over time if carbon emissions are curbed and local stressors are addressed.

Porites lobata. Photo courtesy of Keoki Stender.

The study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by researchers at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa Hawaiʻi Institute of Marine Biology, showed findings suggest that coral conservation in a changing world is possible—but urgent action is essential.

This work was conducted by the Toonen-Bowen “ToBo” Lab, with partners at UH Mānoa and The Ohio State University.

According to a press release from the university, researchers created 40 experimental systems known as “mesocosms,” which mimic the environment of a coral reef in the wild. The mesocosms included eight Hawaiian coral species, reef sand, rubble and marine creatures, representing one of the most diverse ecosystems on the planet. For two years, the team exposed the mesocosms to different scenarios of higher temperature, higher acidity or a combination of both ocean stressors to see how the reef communities would react to future climate scenarios.

Hawaiian coral reefs are teeming with life. Photo courtesy of Andre Seale
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“By understanding how these species respond to climate change, we should have a better understanding of how Hawaiian reefs and other Indo-Pacific reefs will change over time, and how to better allocate resources as well as plan for the future,” said Christopher Jury, post-doctoral researcher and lead author of the study.

The team controlled levels of temperature and acidity in the mesocosms. They measured the calcification (where individual coral organisms build their own skeletons by secreting a salt known as calcium carbonate) responses of the coral reef communities and the biodiversity of these systems.

“These experimental reef communities persisted as new reef communities rather than collapsing,” said Jury. “This was a very surprising result, since almost all projections of reef futures suggest that the corals should have almost entirely died, the reef communities should have experienced net carbonate dissolution, and reef biodiversity should have collapsed. None of those things happened in this study.”

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Rob Toonen, professor and Ruth Gates Endowed chair, and co-senior author of the study, said rather than focusing on just one or two species in isolation, the researchers included the entire complement of reef species from microbes, to algae, invertebrates, and fish, under realistic conditions they would experience in nature.

“These more realistic mesocosm experiments help us to understand how coral reefs will change over time,” Toonen said.

This study shows that with effective and timely climate change mitigation measures in place, coral reefs will continue to change, but global reef collapse may still be avoidable.

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“The recognition that coral reefs are not doomed if we take appropriate action on climate change and local stressors reinforces the need to accomplish these goals,” said Jury. “Under potential future ocean warming and acidification, coral reef communities will change substantially, but are unlikely to collapse if global change is limited to Paris Climate Agreement targets and local stressors are adequately addressed.”

This research is funded by Hawaiʻi Sea Grant; the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Ocean Acidification Program; NOAA OAP; Herbert W. Hoover Foundation; Sigma Xi Scientific Honor Society National and Ohio State Chapters; Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior – Brasil (CAPES) fellowship and Clear Reef funds; and National Science Foundation.

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