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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
Save the Coral Reefs!
2017-03-19
Reducing pollution and curbing overfishing won't prevent the severe bleaching that is killing coral at catastrophic rates, according to a study of Australia's Great Barrier Reef. In the end, researchers say, the only way to save the world's coral from heat-induced bleaching is with a war on global warming.
I was in the Bahamas last year and a lot of those islands looked like old coral reefs - when the ocean was 150' deeper.
Across the world, scores of brilliantly colored coral reefs once teeming with life have in recent years become desolate, white graveyards. Their deaths due to coral bleaching have grown more frequent as ocean temperatures rise, mainly due to increasing greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
So remind me again - what caused the global warming 56 and 58 million years ago?
Preserving coral reefs is crucial, given we depend on them for everything from food to medical research to protection from damaging coastal storms. Scientists and policymakers have thus been scrambling to find ways to prevent bleaching. Last year, for example, Hawaiian officials proposed several measures they hoped would fight bleaching on the state's reefs, such as limiting fishing, establishing new marine protected areas and controlling polluted runoff from land.
Shirley, there must be other tax-funded ways to control nature?
Ultimately, the study concluded, saving reefs from the ravages of bleaching requires urgent action to reduce global warming.
Posted by:Bobby

#8  Thanks for that Ranger.
Posted by: Besoeker   2017-03-19 21:46  

#7  As I understand it "coral" is naturally white, and is incapable of making (or extracting) its own food. The color comes from external organisms that "colonize" it, and which can make their own food - mostly by photosynthesis. The coral is parasitic, and draws nutrients from the colonizing organisms. But - the organisms pose some hazard to the coral, if they "get out of control". If the environment gets TOO friendly to the organisms, they flourish to the point where the coral "loses control" - and the coral the EXPELS the organisms to protect itself, This expulsion does not kill the coral - nor do local environmental conditions - but without resident organisms, the coral slowly starves to death.

So - coral likes depleted conditions, which are just barely bountiful enough for resident organisms to barely survive - in weakened state - so that the coral can exploit them. When local conditions IMPROVE sufficiently to make the organisms strong and comfortable, they overpower the coral, and the coral is forced to kick them out This does not "bleach" the coral - it just results in the coral returning to its natural color, sans "external" inhabitants.
Posted by: Lone Ranger   2017-03-19 20:44  

#6  #5 Across the world, scores of brilliantly colored coral reefs once teeming with life have in recent years become desolate, white graveyards

Fishing with explosives tends to do that.

Agricultural runoff is the main problem with the Great Barrier Reef. The Ningaloo Reef (the longest continous coral reef in the world) on my side of Australia has no bleaching, as there is no agriculture on the adjacent land. A lot of feral sheep and goats though.
Posted by: phil_b   2017-03-19 18:47  

#5  Across the world, scores of brilliantly colored coral reefs once teeming with life have in recent years become desolate, white graveyards

"GAH! White privilege even kills coral reefs! When will it stopppp :-( "
Posted by: Frank G   2017-03-19 16:19  

#4  Stop ocean dumping of NYC garbage.
Posted by: Skidmark   2017-03-19 16:11  

#3  But TW, as they say, where's the graft in that?
Posted by: CrazyFool   2017-03-19 16:09  

#2  Kill Vibrio Sp.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2017-03-19 15:59  

#1  It's actually quite easy to rebuild bleached coral reefs -- marine biologists have been doing it off Belize for over a decade, and no doubt elsewhere as well. Link
Posted by: trailing wife   2017-03-19 15:47  

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