Current:Home > ContactFor Florida’s Ailing Corals, No Relief From the Heat -Infinite Edge Capital
For Florida’s Ailing Corals, No Relief From the Heat
View
Date:2025-04-13 01:47:26
ORLANDO, Fla.—No immediate end is in sight to the unprecedented marine heat wave stressing the state’s coral reefs, raising fears the heart-rending losses seen here may portend a global bleaching event that could affect reefs from Florida to Colombia, scientists of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Thursday.
The scientists said the record temperatures affecting the state’s corals, including those protected as part of the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, which includes the only barrier reef in the continental United States, are remarkable not only for their intensity but duration.
Since April NOAA scientists have tracked a steady rise in ocean temperatures. In the Florida Keys, the temperatures have been higher than previous records for 29 days between July 9 and Aug. 16. The scientists say the heat stress developed earlier than ever before by five to six weeks.
“There is a big concern among the coral reef scientific community that we are potentially walking into another global bleaching event, based on what we know and what history has taught us,” said Derek Manzello, coordinator of NOAA’s Coral Reef Watch Program. “This is a very serious event, and Florida is just the tip of the iceberg.”
It will be months before scientists fully understand the scope of the problem, but they say they are seeing “thousands upon thousands” of miles of corals undergoing bleaching as a result of heat stress in Belize, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, El Salvador, Mexico, Panama, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, with Florida most impacted.
The heat wave is forecast to last through at least October, although a cooling event like a hurricane could change that, they said.
Heat affects corals, which are sedentary animals, by breaking down their relationship with the microscopic algae that lives inside them, gives them their color and provides them with food.
When the water is too warm, the corals eject the algae, leaving the corals to turn white. It is possible for corals to survive bleaching if the water temperature normalizes in enough time, but the event can leave the corals weakened and susceptible to disease.
The problem is expected to grow worse and more widespread as the global climate warms. The ocean absorbs 90 percent of the excess heat associated with climate change, and scientists say marine heat waves are intensifying worldwide.
Reefs are crucial to marine biodiversity and are important economic drivers, drawing snorkelers, scuba divers and anglers. They also serve as natural buffers protecting coastal communities from the pounding waves of storms and hurricanes.
To a lesser extent, corals are also threatened by acidification, the other impact on the oceans caused by the greenhouse gases warming the planet. Oceans absorb about 25 percent of the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
The carbon dioxide dissolves in water and forms a mild acid that neutralizes calcium carbonate and bicarbonate, which corals and other invertebrates use to build their hard shells and skeletons. Acidic ocean water can even dissolve these shells.
In Florida the mass bleaching event has sparked a rush to rescue the ailing corals from the hot waters and relocate them to on-land tanks, where they can be preserved. Thousands of corals have been relocated from the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, said Andy Bruckner, the sanctuary’s research coordinator.
He said the effort also involves monitoring to identify corals that are showing resilience to the extraordinary temperatures.
“By next spring we will have a sense of how severe the impacts were from this event. But right now, other than the fact that we are seeing bleaching everywhere,” he said, “we don’t have a lot more information.”
“We do need to worry,” he added.
veryGood! (23)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Hong Kong places arrest bounties on activists abroad for breaching national security law
- Jonathan Majors' text messages, audio recordings to ex-girlfriend unsealed in assault trial: Reports
- Danish police arrest several people suspected of planning terror attacks
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Colombian congressional panel sets probe into president over alleged campaign finance misdeeds
- Watch: Rare blonde raccoon a repeat visitor to Iowa backyard, owner names him Blondie
- The Republican leading the probe of Hunter Biden has his own shell company and complicated friends
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- CBS News poll analysis: Some Democrats don't want Biden to run again. Why not?
Ranking
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Discovery inside unearthed bottle would’ve shocked the scientist who buried it in 1879
- Discovery inside unearthed bottle would’ve shocked the scientist who buried it in 1879
- Former British soldier to stand trial over Bloody Sunday killings half a century ago
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Brooklyn Nine-Nine cast pays homage to Andre Braugher
- NBA All-Star George McGinnis dies at 73 after complications from a cardiac arrest
- Man charged in the murder of Detroit synagogue president Samantha Woll
Recommendation
Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
Ben Roethlisberger takes jabs at Steelers, Mike Tomlin's 'bad coaching' in loss to Patriots
A FedEx Christmas shipping deadline is today. Here are some other key dates to keep in mind.
'The Crown' ends as pensive meditation on the most private public family on Earth
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
In Giuliani defamation trial, Ruby Freeman says she received hundreds of racist messages after she was targeted online
Pennsylvania house legislators vote to make 2023 the Taylor Swift era
Bachelor Nation's Shawn Booth Welcomes First Baby With Dre Joseph