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Past the Precipice? Projected Coral Habitability Under Global Heating.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Kalmus, P; Ekanayaka, A; Kang, E; Baird, M; Gierach, M
Published in: Earth's future
May 2022

Coral reefs are rapidly declining due to local environmental degradation and global climate change. In particular, corals are vulnerable to ocean heating. Anomalously hot sea surface temperatures (SSTs) create conditions for severe bleaching or direct thermal death. We use SST observations and CMIP6 model SST to project thermal conditions at reef locations at a resolution of 1 km, a 16-fold improvement over prior studies, under four climate emissions scenarios. We use a novel statistical downscaling method which is significantly more skillful than the standard method, especially at near-coastal pixels where many reefs are found. For each location we present projections of thermal departure (TD, the date after which a location with steadily increasing heat exceeds a given thermal metric) for severe bleaching recurs every 5 years (TD5Y) and every 10 years (TD10Y), accounting for a range of post-bleaching reef recovery/degradation. As of 2021, we find that over 91% and 79% of 1 km2 reefs have exceeded TD10Y and TD5Y, respectively, suggesting that widespread long-term coral degradation is no longer avoidable. We project 99% of 1 km2 reefs to exceed TD5Y by 2034, 2036, and 2040 under SSP5-8.5, SSP3-7.0, and SSP2-4.5 respectively. We project that 2%-5% of reef locations remain below TD5Y at 1.5°C of mean global heating, but 0% remain at 2.0°C. These results demonstrate the importance of further improving ecological projection capacity for climate-vulnerable marine and terrestrial species and ecosystems, including identifying refugia and guiding conservation efforts. Ultimately, saving coral reefs will require rapidly reducing and eliminating greenhouse gas emissions.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Earth's future

DOI

EISSN

2328-4277

ISSN

2328-4277

Publication Date

May 2022

Volume

10

Issue

5

Start / End Page

e2021EF002608

Related Subject Headings

  • 3707 Hydrology
  • 3702 Climate change science
  • 0502 Environmental Science and Management
  • 0406 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
  • 0401 Atmospheric Sciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Kalmus, P., Ekanayaka, A., Kang, E., Baird, M., & Gierach, M. (2022). Past the Precipice? Projected Coral Habitability Under Global Heating. Earth’s Future, 10(5), e2021EF002608. https://doi.org/10.1029/2021ef002608
Kalmus, P., A. Ekanayaka, E. Kang, M. Baird, and M. Gierach. “Past the Precipice? Projected Coral Habitability Under Global Heating.Earth’s Future 10, no. 5 (May 2022): e2021EF002608. https://doi.org/10.1029/2021ef002608.
Kalmus P, Ekanayaka A, Kang E, Baird M, Gierach M. Past the Precipice? Projected Coral Habitability Under Global Heating. Earth’s future. 2022 May;10(5):e2021EF002608.
Kalmus, P., et al. “Past the Precipice? Projected Coral Habitability Under Global Heating.Earth’s Future, vol. 10, no. 5, May 2022, p. e2021EF002608. Epmc, doi:10.1029/2021ef002608.
Kalmus P, Ekanayaka A, Kang E, Baird M, Gierach M. Past the Precipice? Projected Coral Habitability Under Global Heating. Earth’s future. 2022 May;10(5):e2021EF002608.
Journal cover image

Published In

Earth's future

DOI

EISSN

2328-4277

ISSN

2328-4277

Publication Date

May 2022

Volume

10

Issue

5

Start / End Page

e2021EF002608

Related Subject Headings

  • 3707 Hydrology
  • 3702 Climate change science
  • 0502 Environmental Science and Management
  • 0406 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
  • 0401 Atmospheric Sciences