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OpEdNews Op Eds    H3'ed 4/14/22

Coral Bleaching and Climate Change

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Message Arshad M Khan

The phenomenon of coral bleaching is becoming increasingly common along the Great Barrier Reef in Australia. According to the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS), it happened in 2020 and has now occurred again.

When the water is too warm, corals expel zooxanthellae, an algae living in their tissues -- reducing themselves to survive the heat better. The coral is not dead, just slimmer, under greater stress, and thus more vulnerable.

The US lost half of its coral reefs in the Caribbean in 2005, when warm waters, centered near the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico, expanded southward. Satellite data confirmed the thermal stress had been greater than the total of the previous 20 years.

Algae is the coral's primary food source and gives it color while the coral provides a protected environment for the algae. Thus the two enjoy a symbiotic relationship which under temperature stress can cause the algae to leave. Having lost its principal food source, the coral turns very pale and becomes susceptible to disease. It can take as long as a decade to recover from such trauma.

Thus back-to-back bleaching events as on Australia's Great Barrier Reef are cause for concern. This is now its fourth mass bleaching event in six years. The heat stress can slow coral growth and limits its spawning abilities, extending the effects to new generations. Seeding the damaged areas with healthy coral often developed in nurseries to withstand such stresses is another technique.

Meanwhile, the Australian government continues its support of fossil fuel industries, particularly coal and natural gas, even though coal is recognized as the worst fossil fuel polluter responsible for 0.3Â degreesC of the 1Â degreesC increase in global mean temperatures.

These temperatures are expected to rise 3.2Â degreesC by the end of the century at the present rate making the lives of our successor generations exceedingly difficult as they cope with frequent adverse weather events like wildfires, hurricanes or typhoons.

The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has now presented its guidelines on what we must do to limit temperature rise to 1.5Â degreesC.

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Arshad M Khan is a former Professor. Educated at King's College London, Oklahoma State University and the University of Chicago, he has a multidisciplinary background that has frequently informed his research. He was elected a Fellow of the (more...)
 
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