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High frequency temperature variability reduces the risk of coral bleaching
by
Safaie, Aryan
, Barshis, Daniel J.
, Rogers, Justin S.
, Williams, Gareth J.
, Pawlak, Geno
, Davis, Kristen A.
, Hench, James L.
, McClanahan, Timothy R.
, Silbiger, Nyssa J.
in
631/158/2165
/ 704/829/2737
/ 704/829/826
/ Algae
/ Animals
/ Anthozoa - physiology
/ Chlorophyta - physiology
/ Coral bleaching
/ Coral Reefs
/ Corals
/ Ecosystem
/ Expulsion
/ Hot Temperature
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ In situ measurement
/ Marine ecosystems
/ multidisciplinary
/ Ocean temperature
/ Ocean warming
/ Remote observing
/ Remote sensing
/ Risk reduction
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Seasons
/ Seawater - chemistry
/ Symbionts
/ Symbiosis
/ Temperature
/ Temperature effects
/ Thermal stress
2018
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High frequency temperature variability reduces the risk of coral bleaching
by
Safaie, Aryan
, Barshis, Daniel J.
, Rogers, Justin S.
, Williams, Gareth J.
, Pawlak, Geno
, Davis, Kristen A.
, Hench, James L.
, McClanahan, Timothy R.
, Silbiger, Nyssa J.
in
631/158/2165
/ 704/829/2737
/ 704/829/826
/ Algae
/ Animals
/ Anthozoa - physiology
/ Chlorophyta - physiology
/ Coral bleaching
/ Coral Reefs
/ Corals
/ Ecosystem
/ Expulsion
/ Hot Temperature
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ In situ measurement
/ Marine ecosystems
/ multidisciplinary
/ Ocean temperature
/ Ocean warming
/ Remote observing
/ Remote sensing
/ Risk reduction
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Seasons
/ Seawater - chemistry
/ Symbionts
/ Symbiosis
/ Temperature
/ Temperature effects
/ Thermal stress
2018
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High frequency temperature variability reduces the risk of coral bleaching
by
Safaie, Aryan
, Barshis, Daniel J.
, Rogers, Justin S.
, Williams, Gareth J.
, Pawlak, Geno
, Davis, Kristen A.
, Hench, James L.
, McClanahan, Timothy R.
, Silbiger, Nyssa J.
in
631/158/2165
/ 704/829/2737
/ 704/829/826
/ Algae
/ Animals
/ Anthozoa - physiology
/ Chlorophyta - physiology
/ Coral bleaching
/ Coral Reefs
/ Corals
/ Ecosystem
/ Expulsion
/ Hot Temperature
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ In situ measurement
/ Marine ecosystems
/ multidisciplinary
/ Ocean temperature
/ Ocean warming
/ Remote observing
/ Remote sensing
/ Risk reduction
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Seasons
/ Seawater - chemistry
/ Symbionts
/ Symbiosis
/ Temperature
/ Temperature effects
/ Thermal stress
2018
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High frequency temperature variability reduces the risk of coral bleaching
Journal Article
High frequency temperature variability reduces the risk of coral bleaching
2018
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Overview
Coral bleaching is the detrimental expulsion of algal symbionts from their cnidarian hosts, and predominantly occurs when corals are exposed to thermal stress. The incidence and severity of bleaching is often spatially heterogeneous within reef-scales (<1 km), and is therefore not predictable using conventional remote sensing products. Here, we systematically assess the relationship between in situ measurements of 20 environmental variables, along with seven remotely sensed SST thermal stress metrics, and 81 observed bleaching events at coral reef locations spanning five major reef regions globally. We find that high-frequency temperature variability (i.e., daily temperature range) was the most influential factor in predicting bleaching prevalence and had a mitigating effect, such that a 1 °C increase in daily temperature range would reduce the odds of more severe bleaching by a factor of 33. Our findings suggest that reefs with greater high-frequency temperature variability may represent particularly important opportunities to conserve coral ecosystems against the major threat posed by warming ocean temperatures.
Coral bleaching is often predicted via remote sensing of ocean temperatures at large scales, obscuring important reef-scale drivers and biological responses. Here, the authors use in- situ data to show that bleaching is lower globally at reef habitats with greater diurnal temperature variability.
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