Deep reefs of the Great Barrier Reef offer limited thermal refuge during mass coral bleaching

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作者
Pedro R. Frade
Pim Bongaerts
Norbert Englebert
Alice Rogers
Manuel Gonzalez-Rivero
Ove Hoegh-Guldberg
机构
[1] University of Algarve,Centre of Marine Sciences
[2] The University of Queensland,Global Change Institute
[3] The University of Queensland,Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
[4] California Academy of Sciences,School of Biological Sciences
[5] The University of Queensland,School of Biological Sciences
[6] Victoria University of Wellington,undefined
[7] Australian Institute of Marine Science,undefined
[8] PMB 3,undefined
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Nature Communications | / 9卷
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摘要
Our rapidly warming climate is threatening coral reefs as thermal anomalies trigger mass coral bleaching events. Deep (or “mesophotic”) coral reefs are hypothesised to act as major ecological refuges from mass bleaching, but empirical assessments are limited. We evaluated the potential of mesophotic reefs within the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) and adjacent Coral Sea to act as thermal refuges by characterising long-term temperature conditions and assessing impacts during the 2016 mass bleaching event. We found that summer upwelling initially provided thermal relief at upper mesophotic depths (40 m), but then subsided resulting in anomalously warm temperatures even at depth. Bleaching impacts on the deep reefs were severe (40% bleached and 6% dead colonies at 40 m) but significantly lower than at shallower depths (60–69% bleached and 8–12% dead at 5-25 m). While we confirm that deep reefs can offer refuge from thermal stress, we highlight important caveats in terms of the transient nature of the protection and their limited ability to provide broad ecological refuge.
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