Yes,
it would, but the process is already underway
El Niño would be a disaster for the world's coral reefs
Warm
seas could wreck havoc across South America and Asia and devastate
the Coral Triangle – Earth's underwater Amazon
A
large coral in the seas around the Nusa Penida island of Indonesia.
The area is part of the Coral Triangle,stretching across six nations
between Indian oceans: Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, East
Timor, Papue New Guinea and the Solomon Islands. Photograph: Sonny
Tumbelaka/AFP/Getty Images
5
June, 2014
A
growing number of scientists are predicting a major El Niño weather
event this year, which could wreak havoc across South America and
Asia as droughts, floods and other extreme weather events hit
industry and farming. But the impacts on the world’s coral reefs
could be even more disastrous.
The
last big El Niño in 1997/98 caused the worst coral bleaching in
recorded history. In total, 16% of the world’s coral was lost and
some countries like the Maldives lost up to 90% of their reef
coverage. The Australian
Bureau of Meteorology
suggests there’s a 70%
chance
of an El Niño occurring this year – and all the signs are that it
will rival the ’98 event.
El
Niño arises out of a confluence of factors that are still not fully
understood, but its outcome is clear – parts of the ocean get
hotter. A band of warm water develops in the western Pacific, while
the Indo-Pacific Warm Pool – a blob of heat that spans much of
Indonesia – starts oscillating wildly. This could spell disaster
for the Coral Triangle, a southeast Asian bioregion that’s the
underwater equivalent of the Amazon, home to more marine species than
anywhere else on Earth.
“In
1998, the Coral Triangle started to bleach in May and continued till
September,” says Professor Ove Hoeg Guldberg, a marine biologist
and head of the Global Change Institute at the University of
Queensland. “The Coral Triangle sees prolonged periods of
temperature anomaly during an El Niño because the equator passes
through the middle of it, so it experiences both northern and
southern hemisphere summers.”
Professor
Guldberg, who led the Oceans chapter of the IPCC report on climate
change, is less than sanguine about the prospects for the region’s
coral reefs. “It only takes about half a degree on top of
background sea temperatures to cause bleaching,” he explains.
“Atmospheric scientists are telling us we’re headed for
temperatures that will trump those of 1998.”
Corals
are animals that behave like plants. They’re able to do this by
maintaining a symbiotic relationship with dinoflagellates, a type of
microbe that lives inside the coral’s tissue where it
photosynthesises, passing sugar to its host. But when temperatures
rise, the dinoflagellates stop making sugar and produce harmful free
radicals instead. The corals then spit them out, stop producing their
carbonate shell and steadily fade to white.
Coral
bleaching is actually quite a common occurrence and bleached reefs
can make comebacks – many of the reefs affected by the 1998 El Niño
have made at least partial recoveries. “The thing is, under mild
conditions, corals can recover their symbiotes,” says Professor
Guldberg. “But because background temperatures are warmer, the
corals can’t recover as before.” Even when reefs do recover, old
growth corals that may have taken centuries to mature are often
replaced with faster growing species that quickly colonise large
areas, homogenising the ecosystem.
The
elephant in the room of course is global warming and this is where
things get scary. According to Professor Guldberg, current rates of
ocean warming and acidification are unmatched in most if not all of
the last 65 million years. “This sends chills down back of any
biologist worth their salt because life will have to struggle in
circumstances that it’s just not evolved for.”
It’s
not so much the fact that 10 or 20% of global reef coverage could be
lost in the next year or so, but the reduced ability of these reefs
to recover. This is death by a thousand cuts, an aggregation of
impacts, from extreme weather events to invasive species to
destructive fishing practices, with global warming reverberating
across all of them. A landmark 2007 study by John Bruno and Elizabeth
Selig showed that the Coral Triangle had lost nearly 50% of its reefs
since the 1980s. Beset by constantly rising temperatures, they simply
can’t bounce back.
The
Coral Triangle is particularly vulnerable because it’s more prone
to non-climate related pressures than other reefs. According to the
World Resources Institute, more than 85%
of reefs
within the bioregion are threatened by local stressors (overfishing,
destructive fishing and pollution), which is substantially higher
than the global average of 60%. About 120 million people depend
directly on these reefs for their livelihood. As the coral dies, more
and more of them will be forced to migrate to live. “You’re
looking at a situation where a once vibrant ecosystem that offered
goods and services for humanity is heading towards extinction,”
says Professor Guldberg.
The
broad scientific consensus is that corals worldwide could be on the
verge of extinction by
as early as 2050.
In the broader context of global warming, coral reefs are not
necessarily the first ecosystems to go, but they are the most
graphic. They can be seen as an early warning system – the
proverbial canary in the coalmine, except when corals start to
expire, it tends to presage species annihilation on a scale witnessed
only five times previously in the planet’s history. That’s why
the term “sixth extinction” is becoming part of the media
lexicon.
The
only meaningful solution in the long term is to drastically reduce
carbon emissions worldwide. Not much can be done to mitigate the
impact of an impending El Niño, but some of the other non-climate
related stresses can be removed. This means establishing areas of
undisturbed marine habitat – lots of them – and reducing pressure
on fisheries. Guldberg offers the metaphor of a chronically ill
patient that needs radical treatment – “but they also need
remedial care – blankets, water, food. That’s something immediate
we can achieve.” As for the radical treatment, it needs to happen
very soon. If not, corals could soon become mere aquarium artefacts.
Johnny
Langenheim is a contributor to The
Coral Triangle website
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