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Caribbean mesophotic coral ecosystems are unlikely climate change refugia. | LitMetric

Caribbean mesophotic coral ecosystems are unlikely climate change refugia.

Glob Chang Biol

Center for Marine and Environmental Studies, University of the Virgin Islands, #2 John Brewers Bay, St. Thomas, VI, 00802, USA.

Published: August 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Deeper coral reefs are believed to offer protection from thermal stress and bleaching due to lower temperatures and reduced light exposure, challenging the deep reef refugia hypothesis.
  • Over two thermal stress events studied, mesophotic reefs (30-75 m deep) showed a decline in bleaching threshold temperatures with depth, contradicting the idea that deeper reefs are safer from climate impacts.
  • The findings suggest that cooler depths do not provide immunity against climate change, indicating that both deep and shallow coral reefs are similarly vulnerable to rising sea temperatures.

Article Abstract

Deeper coral reefs experience reduced temperatures and light and are often shielded from localized anthropogenic stressors such as pollution and fishing. The deep reef refugia hypothesis posits that light-dependent stony coral species at deeper depths are buffered from thermal stress and will avoid bleaching-related mass mortalities caused by increasing sea surface temperatures under climate change. This hypothesis has not been tested because data collection on deeper coral reefs is difficult. Here we show that deeper (mesophotic) reefs, 30-75 m depth, in the Caribbean are not refugia because they have lower bleaching threshold temperatures than shallow reefs. Over two thermal stress events, mesophotic reef bleaching was driven by a bleaching threshold that declines 0.26 °C every +10 m depth. Thus, the main premise of the deep reef refugia hypothesis that cooler environments are protective is incorrect; any increase in temperatures above the local mean warmest conditions can lead to thermal stress and bleaching. Thus, relatively cooler temperatures can no longer be considered a de facto refugium for corals and it is likely that many deeper coral reefs are as vulnerable to climate change as shallow water reefs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.13175DOI Listing

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