Current:Home > MarketsFearing Their Kids Will Inherit Dead Coral Reefs, Scientists Are Urging Bold Action -CapitalWay
Fearing Their Kids Will Inherit Dead Coral Reefs, Scientists Are Urging Bold Action
View
Date:2025-04-15 16:20:52
Coral reef biologists are often asked the same question again and again: "When my kids grow up, will there still be coral reefs?"
"That's a question I ask myself," says Christopher Cornwall, a research fellow at Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand. "The greatest fear is that all the coral will be gone at a certain point in time."
New research shows that, in a hotter climate, urgent action will be needed to prevent the vast majority of coral species from collapsing by the end of the century. Humans will have to limit emissions of heat-trapping gases, but that alone likely won't be enough. Reefs may also need a helping hand through efforts like restoration or coral breeding, which cultivates heat-resistant varieties.
Without that, the picture looks increasingly grim. Coral reefs are biodiversity hot spots, supporting around a quarter of all fish species. Millions of people around the world also rely on them for food, jobs and flood protection, since reefs help prevent storm surges from inundating coastlines.
The dramatic impacts come from a climate triple whammy: marine heat waves, ocean acidification and overall warming. The oceans have borne the brunt of climate change thus far, absorbing the vast majority of heat caused by human impacts.
Marine heat waves are expected to become more intense, and high temperatures cause corals to turn ghostly white in what's known as "coral bleaching."
Corals live in a domestic partnership, of sorts, with microscopic algae. The algae provide food for corals, not to mention their vibrant colors. But under periods of intense heat stress, the corals expel the algae, leaving only white skeletons. Some reefs can recover over time, but many die as a result.
These mass bleaching events have been devastating in places like the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, which has experienced three in the last five years.
"It's quite traumatic to see these events in person," Cornwall says. "What happens is only a small fraction of that coral will be able to recover from those events, and a large proportion of those, depending on the heat stress, will die."
Once absorbed by the oceans, carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels reacts with the water to make it more acidic. The increased acidification can erode reefs and makes it harder for corals to build their skeletons. Overall warmer water temperatures also reduce the reefs' growth rates, even without a marine heat wave.
Corals have to continually grow to counteract erosion from both waves and storms and consumption by other animals such as sponges, sea urchins and parrotfish. But according to a new study, climate change may halt coral growth altogether.
Cornwall and his colleagues looked at three climate futures where human-caused emissions are low, medium or high. Under the medium and high scenarios, the majority of coral reefs are no longer growing by the end of the century. Instead, they'll be eroding away.
Even under the lowest-emissions future, coral growth rates would still be reduced by 76%. Reefs that have experienced less pollution or overfishing will likely do better.
"If we miss this low-emissions-scenario target, the coral reefs are essentially doomed," Cornwall says.
Those dire scenarios have scientists looking for ways to give reefs a helping hand.
"This is just the first major ecosystem that we feel could collapse," says Joanie Kleypas, a scientist at the U.S. National Center for Atmospheric Research, a federally funded research institute. "So we have to do something. The eyes are on us."
Like many other scientists, Kleypas is studying coral species that seem able to handle higher heat or higher acidity. At her field site in Costa Rica, she has seen some hopeful results after major bleaching events.
"The corals survived," she says. "They were completely bleached for months and there was some mortality, but by and large, they survived. So they have some kind of secret."
Scientists are looking at breeding these resilient corals, which could be used to restore reefs. Other protections, such as preventing pollution and overfishing, are also key, Kleypas says.
Still, all these efforts to help corals adapt to hotter temperatures won't be enough if greenhouse gas emissions remain high. In a study published this month, Kleypas and others found that adaptation strategies could buy corals more time if emissions are lowered. But under high emissions, corals still largely disappear.
"If we act fast enough to execute that plan and we bring carbon dioxide emissions way down, then we do — we believe we have a chance that this is the way forward for saving the ecosystem," she says.
Time is short, she says. For coral reefs to survive, emissions would have to fall to zero before 2100, and restoration and adaptation tools would have to be rolled out in a widespread way in the next 20 to 30 years.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Storm Gerrit damages houses and leaves thousands without power as it batters the northern UK
- Dominican baseball player Wander Franco fails to appear at prosecutor’s office amid investigation
- West Virginia's Neal Brown gets traditional mayonnaise shower after Mayo Bowl win
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- University of Wisconsin-La Crosse chancellor fired for appearing in porn videos
- Social media companies made $11 billion in ad revenue from kids and teens, study finds
- Ohio’s GOP governor vetoes ban on gender-affirming care, transgender athletes in girls sports
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- House Republicans seek documents from White House over Biden's involvement in Hunter Biden's refusal to comply with congressional subpoena
Ranking
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- South Carolina nuclear plant’s cracked pipes get downgraded warning from nuclear officials
- Country star Jon Pardi explains why he 'retired' from drinking: 'I was so unhappy'
- Independent lawyers begin prosecuting cases of sexual assault and other crimes in the US military
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- This go-to tech gadget is like the Ring camera - but for your cargo bed
- Anti-corruption authorities to investigate Zambia’s finance minister over cash-counting video
- The Air Force said its nuclear missile capsules were safe. But toxins lurked, documents show
Recommendation
Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
West Virginia's Neal Brown gets traditional mayonnaise shower after Mayo Bowl win
Bill Maher promotes junk science in opposing lifesaving research tests on animals
North Korea's Kim Jong Un preparing for war − citing 'unprecedented' US behavior
'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
New lawsuit claims Jermaine Jackson sexually assaulted woman, Berry Gordy assisted in 'cover-up'
A school reunion for Albert Brooks and Rob Reiner
Judge turns down Democrat Sen. Bob Menendez’s request to delay his May bribery trial for two months