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Journal ArticleDOI

Coral reef bleaching: ecological perspectives

Peter W. Glynn
- 01 Mar 1993 - 
- Vol. 12, Iss: 1, pp 1-17
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TLDR
An effort must be made to understand the impact of bleaching on the remainder of the reef community and the long-term effects on competition, predation, symbioses, bioerosion and substrate condition, all factors that can influence coral recruitment and reef recovery.
Abstract
Coral reef bleaching, the whitening of diverse invertebrate taxa, results from the loss of symbiotic zooxanthellae and/or a reduction in photosynthetic pigment concentrations in zooxanthellae residing within the gastrodermal tissues of host animals. Of particular concern are the consequences of bleaching of large numbers of reef-building scleractinian corals and hydrocorals. Published records of coral reef bleaching events from 1870 to the present suggest that the frequency (60 major events from 1979 to 1990), scale (co-occurrence in many coral reef regions and often over the bathymetric depth range of corals) and severity (>95% mortality in some areas) of recent bleaching disturbances are unprecedented in the scientific literature. The causes of small scale, isolated bleaching events can often be explained by particular stressors (e.g., temperature, salinity, light, sedimentation, aerial exposure and pollutants), but attempts to explain large scale bleaching events in terms of possible global change (e.g., greenhouse warming, increased UV radiation flux, deteriorating ecosystem health, or some combination of the above) have not been convincing. Attempts to relate the severity and extent of large scale coral reef bleaching events to particular causes have been hampered by a lack of (a) standardized methods to assess bleaching and (b) continuous, long-term data bases of environmental conditions over the periods of interest. An effort must be made to understand the impact of bleaching on the remainder of the reef community and the long-term effects on competition, predation, symbioses, bioerosion and substrate condition, all factors that can influence coral recruitment and reef recovery. If projected rates of sea warming are realized by mid to late AD 2000, i.e. a 2°C increase in high latitude coral seas, the upper thermal tolerance limits of many reef-building corals could be exceeded. Present evidence suggests that many corals would be unable to adapt physiologically or genetically to such marked and rapid temperature increases.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Climate Change and Sea Surface Temperature: Modelling the Effects on Coral Bleaching

TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of sea surface temperature on coral living, coral bleaching, coral growth and modelling for influential high temperature on corals as a significant biodiversity of tropical regions.

cDNA microarray-based studies of thermal stress-induced bleaching in the Caribbean corals Montastraea faveolata and Acropora palmata

TL;DR: In focusing on thermal stress and bleaching microarray experiments in the Caribbean corals Acropora palmata and Montastraea faveolata, the following cellular processes/components are affected during bleaching: oxidative stress, chaperone activity, the glyoxylate cycle, DNA repair, calcium homeostasis, cell death, the extracellular matrix, cell cycle progression, and metabolite transfer between host and symbiont.
Book ChapterDOI

Vibrios in Coral Health and Disease

TL;DR: Koch’s postulates were applied to demonstrate that Vibrio shiloi is the causative agent of the bleaching disease of Oculina patagonica, and it was shown that the observed intracellular bacteria were, in fact, V.Shiloi.
MonographDOI

Coral biomineralization, climate proxies and the sensitivity of coral reefs to CO2-driven climate change

TL;DR: Cohen et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the mechanism of coral biomineralization and evaluated the sensitivity of coral reef CaCO3 production to seawater carbonate chemistry, and developed a quantitative coral-based model that predicts temperature can be reconstructed from coral skeletons by combining Sr/Ca which is sensitive to both temperature and CO2−3 with U/Ca into a new proxy called “Sr-U”.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The commonly observed high diversity of trees in tropical rain forests and corals on tropical reefs is a nonequilibrium state which, if not disturbed further, will progress toward a low-diversity equilibrium community as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

Responses of coral reefs and reef organisms to sedimentation

TL;DR: Data is needed on the threshold levels for reef orgarusms and for the reef ecosystem as a whole the levels above which sedimentation has lethal effects for particular species and above which normal functioning of the reef ceases.
Book

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