Thermal stress and tropical reefs: mass coral bleaching in a stable temperature environment?

被引:26
|
作者
de Oliveira Soares, Marcelo [1 ,2 ]
Peres Teixeira, Carlos Eduardo [1 ]
Cavalcante Ferreira, Sarah Maria [1 ]
Alves Reboucas Gurgel, Anne Larisse [1 ]
Paiva, Barbara Pereira [1 ]
Bezerra Menezes, Maria Ozilea [1 ]
Davis, Marcus [1 ,3 ]
Lopes Tavares, Tallita Cruz [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Fed Ceara, Inst Ciencias Mar LABOMAR, Av Abolicao 3207, Fortaleza, Ceara, Brazil
[2] UAB, ICTA, Edif Z, Barcelona, Spain
[3] Mar Ceara, Fortaleza, Ceara, Brazil
关键词
ENSO; Coral reef; Temperature; Climate change; Siderastrea stellata; Brazil; SEA-SURFACE TEMPERATURE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; BRAZIL; IMPACTS; COAST; VARIABILITY; ECOSYSTEMS; PATTERNS; ISLAND; EVENT;
D O I
10.1007/s12526-019-00994-4
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
This study reports on the deepest records (~ 24 m depth) of coral bleaching in a naturally temperature-stable environment (> 26 degrees C with an intra-annual variability of ~ 2 degrees C), which was recorded during a mass bleaching event in the locally dominant, massive scleractinian coral Siderastrea stellata in equatorial waters of Brazil (SW Atlantic). An inter-annual analysis (2002-2017) indicated that this bleaching event was related to anomalies in sea surface temperature (SST) that led to the warmest year (2010) in this century (1 to 1.7 degrees C above average). Such anomalies caused heat stress (28.5-29.5 degrees C) in this equatorial environment that resulted in a bleaching event. Our results suggest that the increase in SST, low turbidity, and weak winds may have acted together to affect these stress-tolerant corals in marginal reefs. The equatorial coastline of Brazil is characterized by low intra-annual and inter-annual variations in SST, which suggests that the S. stellata corals here may be acclimatized to these stable conditions and, consequently, have a lower bleaching threshold because of lower historical heat stress.
引用
收藏
页码:2921 / 2929
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Effects of modeled tropical sea surface temperature variability on coral reef bleaching predictions
    R. van Hooidonk
    M. Huber
    Coral Reefs, 2012, 31 : 121 - 131
  • [42] Effects of modeled tropical sea surface temperature variability on coral reef bleaching predictions
    van Hooidonk, R.
    Huber, M.
    CORAL REEFS, 2012, 31 (01) : 121 - 131
  • [43] High-resolution in situ thermal metrics coupled with acute heat stress experiments reveal differential coral bleaching susceptibility
    Klepac, Courtney N.
    Barshis, Daniel J.
    CORAL REEFS, 2022, 41 (04) : 1045 - 1057
  • [44] High-resolution in situ thermal metrics coupled with acute heat stress experiments reveal differential coral bleaching susceptibility
    Klepac, Courtney N.
    Barshis, Daniel J.
    CORAL REEFS, 2022,
  • [45] Diverse symbiont bleaching responses are evident from 2-degree heating week bleaching conditions as thermal stress intensifies in coral
    Gierz, Sarah
    Ainsworth, Tracy D.
    Leggat, William
    MARINE AND FRESHWATER RESEARCH, 2020, 71 (09) : 1149 - 1160
  • [46] Catastrophic mortality on inshore coral reefs of the Florida Keys due to severe low-temperature stress
    Kemp, Dustin W.
    Oakley, Clinton A.
    Thornhill, Daniel J.
    Newcomb, Laura A.
    Schmidt, Gregory W.
    Fitt, Andwilliam K.
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2011, 17 (11) : 3468 - 3477
  • [47] Sea-surface temperature and thermal stress in the Coral Triangle over the past two decades
    Penaflor, E. L.
    Skirving, W. J.
    Strong, A. E.
    Heron, S. F.
    David, L. T.
    CORAL REEFS, 2009, 28 (04) : 841 - 850
  • [48] Variable responses to chronic and acute elevated temperature of three coral species from reefs with distinct thermal regimes
    McRae, Crystal J.
    Keshavmurthy, Shashank
    Meng, Pei-Jie
    Rosset, Sabrina L.
    Huang, Wen-Bin
    Chen, Chaolun Allen
    Fan, Tung-Yung
    Cote, Isabelle M.
    MARINE BIOLOGY, 2022, 169 (07)
  • [49] Validation of Reef-Scale Thermal Stress Satellite Products for Coral Bleaching Monitoring
    Heron, Scott F.
    Johnston, Lyza
    Liu, Gang
    Geiger, Erick F.
    Maynard, Jeffrey A.
    De La Cour, Jacqueline L.
    Johnson, Steven
    Okano, Ryan
    Benavente, David
    Burgess, Timothy F. R.
    Iguel, John
    Perez, Denise I.
    Skirving, William J.
    Strong, Alan E.
    Tirak, Kyle
    Eakin, C. Mark
    REMOTE SENSING, 2016, 8 (01)
  • [50] Predicting thermal stress for coral bleaching in the Great Barrier Reef using a coupled oceanatmosphere seasonal forecast model
    Spillman, C. M.
    Alves, O.
    Hudson, D. A.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, 2013, 33 (04) : 1001 - 1014