Cargando…

Unprecedented Mass Bleaching and Loss of Coral across 12° of Latitude in Western Australia in 2010–11

BACKGROUND: Globally, coral bleaching has been responsible for a significant decline in both coral cover and diversity over the past two decades. During the summer of 2010–11, anomalous large-scale ocean warming induced unprecedented levels of coral bleaching accompanied by substantial storminess ac...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Moore, James A. Y., Bellchambers, Lynda M., Depczynski, Martial R., Evans, Richard D., Evans, Scott N., Field, Stuart N., Friedman, Kim J., Gilmour, James P., Holmes, Thomas H., Middlebrook, Rachael, Radford, Ben T., Ridgway, Tyrone, Shedrawi, George, Taylor, Heather, Thomson, Damian P., Wilson, Shaun K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3524109/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23284773
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0051807
_version_ 1782253273019842560
author Moore, James A. Y.
Bellchambers, Lynda M.
Depczynski, Martial R.
Evans, Richard D.
Evans, Scott N.
Field, Stuart N.
Friedman, Kim J.
Gilmour, James P.
Holmes, Thomas H.
Middlebrook, Rachael
Radford, Ben T.
Ridgway, Tyrone
Shedrawi, George
Taylor, Heather
Thomson, Damian P.
Wilson, Shaun K.
author_facet Moore, James A. Y.
Bellchambers, Lynda M.
Depczynski, Martial R.
Evans, Richard D.
Evans, Scott N.
Field, Stuart N.
Friedman, Kim J.
Gilmour, James P.
Holmes, Thomas H.
Middlebrook, Rachael
Radford, Ben T.
Ridgway, Tyrone
Shedrawi, George
Taylor, Heather
Thomson, Damian P.
Wilson, Shaun K.
author_sort Moore, James A. Y.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Globally, coral bleaching has been responsible for a significant decline in both coral cover and diversity over the past two decades. During the summer of 2010–11, anomalous large-scale ocean warming induced unprecedented levels of coral bleaching accompanied by substantial storminess across more than 12° of latitude and 1200 kilometers of coastline in Western Australia (WA). METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Extreme La-Niña conditions caused extensive warming of waters and drove considerable storminess and cyclonic activity across WA from October 2010 to May 2011. Satellite-derived sea surface temperature measurements recorded anomalies of up to 5°C above long-term averages. Benthic surveys quantified the extent of bleaching at 10 locations across four regions from tropical to temperate waters. Bleaching was recorded in all locations across regions and ranged between 17% (±5.5) in the temperate Perth region, to 95% (±3.5) in the Exmouth Gulf of the tropical Ningaloo region. Coincident with high levels of bleaching, three cyclones passed in close proximity to study locations around the time of peak temperatures. Follow-up surveys revealed spatial heterogeneity in coral cover change with four of ten locations recording significant loss of coral cover. Relative decreases ranged between 22%–83.9% of total coral cover, with the greatest losses in the Exmouth Gulf. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The anomalous thermal stress of 2010–11 induced mass bleaching of corals along central and southern WA coral reefs. Significant coral bleaching was observed at multiple locations across the tropical-temperate divide spanning more than 1200 km of coastline. Resultant spatially patchy loss of coral cover under widespread and high levels of bleaching and cyclonic activity, suggests a degree of resilience for WA coral communities. However, the spatial extent of bleaching casts some doubt over hypotheses suggesting that future impacts to coral reefs under forecast warming regimes may in part be mitigated by southern thermal refugia.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3524109
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2012
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-35241092013-01-02 Unprecedented Mass Bleaching and Loss of Coral across 12° of Latitude in Western Australia in 2010–11 Moore, James A. Y. Bellchambers, Lynda M. Depczynski, Martial R. Evans, Richard D. Evans, Scott N. Field, Stuart N. Friedman, Kim J. Gilmour, James P. Holmes, Thomas H. Middlebrook, Rachael Radford, Ben T. Ridgway, Tyrone Shedrawi, George Taylor, Heather Thomson, Damian P. Wilson, Shaun K. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Globally, coral bleaching has been responsible for a significant decline in both coral cover and diversity over the past two decades. During the summer of 2010–11, anomalous large-scale ocean warming induced unprecedented levels of coral bleaching accompanied by substantial storminess across more than 12° of latitude and 1200 kilometers of coastline in Western Australia (WA). METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Extreme La-Niña conditions caused extensive warming of waters and drove considerable storminess and cyclonic activity across WA from October 2010 to May 2011. Satellite-derived sea surface temperature measurements recorded anomalies of up to 5°C above long-term averages. Benthic surveys quantified the extent of bleaching at 10 locations across four regions from tropical to temperate waters. Bleaching was recorded in all locations across regions and ranged between 17% (±5.5) in the temperate Perth region, to 95% (±3.5) in the Exmouth Gulf of the tropical Ningaloo region. Coincident with high levels of bleaching, three cyclones passed in close proximity to study locations around the time of peak temperatures. Follow-up surveys revealed spatial heterogeneity in coral cover change with four of ten locations recording significant loss of coral cover. Relative decreases ranged between 22%–83.9% of total coral cover, with the greatest losses in the Exmouth Gulf. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The anomalous thermal stress of 2010–11 induced mass bleaching of corals along central and southern WA coral reefs. Significant coral bleaching was observed at multiple locations across the tropical-temperate divide spanning more than 1200 km of coastline. Resultant spatially patchy loss of coral cover under widespread and high levels of bleaching and cyclonic activity, suggests a degree of resilience for WA coral communities. However, the spatial extent of bleaching casts some doubt over hypotheses suggesting that future impacts to coral reefs under forecast warming regimes may in part be mitigated by southern thermal refugia. Public Library of Science 2012-12-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3524109/ /pubmed/23284773 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0051807 Text en © 2012 Moore et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Moore, James A. Y.
Bellchambers, Lynda M.
Depczynski, Martial R.
Evans, Richard D.
Evans, Scott N.
Field, Stuart N.
Friedman, Kim J.
Gilmour, James P.
Holmes, Thomas H.
Middlebrook, Rachael
Radford, Ben T.
Ridgway, Tyrone
Shedrawi, George
Taylor, Heather
Thomson, Damian P.
Wilson, Shaun K.
Unprecedented Mass Bleaching and Loss of Coral across 12° of Latitude in Western Australia in 2010–11
title Unprecedented Mass Bleaching and Loss of Coral across 12° of Latitude in Western Australia in 2010–11
title_full Unprecedented Mass Bleaching and Loss of Coral across 12° of Latitude in Western Australia in 2010–11
title_fullStr Unprecedented Mass Bleaching and Loss of Coral across 12° of Latitude in Western Australia in 2010–11
title_full_unstemmed Unprecedented Mass Bleaching and Loss of Coral across 12° of Latitude in Western Australia in 2010–11
title_short Unprecedented Mass Bleaching and Loss of Coral across 12° of Latitude in Western Australia in 2010–11
title_sort unprecedented mass bleaching and loss of coral across 12° of latitude in western australia in 2010–11
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3524109/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23284773
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0051807
work_keys_str_mv AT moorejamesay unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011
AT bellchamberslyndam unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011
AT depczynskimartialr unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011
AT evansrichardd unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011
AT evansscottn unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011
AT fieldstuartn unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011
AT friedmankimj unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011
AT gilmourjamesp unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011
AT holmesthomash unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011
AT middlebrookrachael unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011
AT radfordbent unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011
AT ridgwaytyrone unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011
AT shedrawigeorge unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011
AT taylorheather unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011
AT thomsondamianp unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011
AT wilsonshaunk unprecedentedmassbleachingandlossofcoralacross12oflatitudeinwesternaustraliain201011