Study: Severe low temperatures devastate coral reefs in Florida Keys – attributed to North Atlantic Oscillation

Temperature from an inshore patch (Admiral Reef) and offshore (Little Grecian) reefs. Dotted line is the average winter (January and February) seawater temperature for Admiral Reef from 2007-2009 (panel a). Photos of Admiral Reef taken in February 2010 show Montastraea faveolata skeletons being overgrown by macroalgae (indicated by arrow, panels b, c). Dead M. annularis (panel d). Tissue necrosis and skeleton of M. cavernosa (panel e). Tissue necrosis from a dead octocoral (panel f). Dead M. faveolata colony with visually unharmed Gorgonia ventalina (panel g). Visually unharmed Siderastrea siderea (panel h). Click image to enlarge
From the University of Georgia, Athens(UGA)

Athens, Ga. – Increased seawater temperatures are known to be a leading cause of the decline of coral reefs all over the world. Now, researchers at the University of Georgia have found that extreme low temperatures affect certain corals in much the same way that high temperatures do, with potentially catastrophic consequences for coral ecosystems. Their findings appear in the early online edition of the journal Global Change Biology.

Lead author Dustin Kemp, a postdoctoral associate in the UGA Odum School of Ecology, said the study was prompted by an abnormal episode of extended cold weather in January and February 2010. Temperatures on inshore reefs in the upper Florida Keys dropped below 12 C (54 F), and remained below 18 C (64 F) for two weeks. Kemp and his colleagues had planned to sample corals at Admiral Reef, an inshore reef off Key Largo, just three weeks after the cold snap. When they arrived, they discovered that the reef, once abundant in hard and soft corals, was essentially dead. “It was the saddest thing I’ve ever seen,” Kemp said. “The large, reef-building corals were gone. Some were estimated to be 200 to 300 years old and had survived other catastrophic events, such as the 1998 El Niño bleaching event. The severe cold water appeared to kill the corals quite rapidly.”

Odum School Professor William Fitt, Kemp’s doctoral advisor and one of the paper’s co-authors, realized that the team had a unique opportunity. “Nearly 100 years ago, Alfred Mayer described the temperature tolerance of different corals in the Dry Tortugas and found very similar results,” Kemp said. “We decided to take the next step and learn how and why the cold temperatures caused the corals to die.”

The researchers took samples of Siderastrea siderea—one of the few reef-building corals to survive—from Admiral Reef. They also took samples of three common Florida Keys corals, Montastraea faveolata, Siderastrea sidereaand Porites astreoides from Little Grecian Reef, a nearby offshore reef that had not experienced the temperature anomaly to the extent of Admiral Reef. Kemp explained that Little Grecian Reef is far enough offshore that the cold-water temperatures were likely buffered by the warm waters of the Gulf Stream, which resulted in offshore coral reefs being less severely affected by the cold air mass that was pushed by an unusual weather pattern over much of the U.S. during that two-week period.

Back in the lab, they simulated the temperatures that had been recorded at Admiral Reef during the cold weather event, testing the different corals’ physiological responses at 12 C and 16 C (61 F), and then, after the corals’ exposure to the cold, returned the temperature to 20 C (68 F). They found that although responses varied depending on the coral species, in general the stress of extended cold temperatures had an effect similar to that of high temperatures.

Kemp explained that corals depend on Symbiodinium, a type of symbiotic algae that lives inside them, for nutrition. Through photosynthesis, the algae produce sugars, which are passed on to the corals. “The cold temperatures inhibited photosynthesis in the algae, leading to a potential net loss of carbon transferred from the algae to the coral,” said Kemp. He said that each coral species had its own unique type of Symbiodinium, some of which were better able to tolerate and recover from cold temperatures than others.

All of the corals experienced a significant decrease in photosynthesis at 12 C. Siderastrea siderea and M. faveolata were able to handle the 16 C temperatures, but P. astreoides was not, and did not show signs of recovery once the temperature was returned to 20 C. Siderastrea siderea was the only coral able to recover.

“Corals and their symbiotic algae have a range of stress tolerance,” said Kemp. “Some can handle moderate stress, some are highly sensitive, and some are in between. But extreme cold is just one stressor among many.” Other threats to coral health include increased seawater temperatures, diseases, ocean acidification, and pollution. “Adding stress from wintertime cold episodes could not only quickly kill corals but also may have long-term effects,” he said. “For corals found in the Florida Keys, winter is typically a ‘non-stressful’ time and corals bulk up on tissue reserves that are important for surviving potentially ‘stressful’ summertime conditions (i.e. coral bleaching).”

Kemp said that researchers at NOAA attribute the record-breaking cold anomaly to a negative trend in the North Atlantic oscillation, an atmospheric pressure pattern that influences the weather in the northern hemisphere. “They speculate that if the trend continues, these kinds of extreme cold events may become more frequent,” he said.

Photographs of coral colonies from Admiral Reef before (panels a, c, e) and after (panels b, d, f) the cold-water anomaly. Photographs were taken in May 2009 (before) and February 2010 (after). Coral species shown are Montastraea faveolata (a, b), Porites astreoides (c, d), and Siderastrea siderea (e, f). “After” photographs of M. faveolata and P. astreoides (panels b, d) show dead colonies, whereas S. siderea (panel f) remained alive. Pigmentation of dead M. faveolata (panel b) is due to overgrowth of the coral skeleton by cyanobacteria and filamentous algae. (Credit: Dustin Kemp/University of Georgia) - Click image to enlarge
Kemp stressed that the study’s findings should not be interpreted to downplay the major role of higher temperatures on corals’ decline. “The study shows that warming may not be the only climate-related problem for coral reefs in the future,” he said.

Kemp also pointed out that it was not only the corals that were devastated by the cold snap. “The corals provide the framework for the entire reef ecosystem,” he said. “The lobster, shrimp, clams, fish—all the creatures that depend on the reef—were affected too. The potential consequences for coral ecosystems are extremely alarming.”

Besides Kemp and Fitt, the paper’s coauthors were Clinton Oakley and Gregory Schmidt of the UGA Department of Plant Biology, Daniel Thornhill of the nonprofit Defenders of Wildlife and Bowdoin College, and Laura Newcomb of Bowdoin College. The research was supported by the National Science Foundation and Bowdoin College.

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68 Comments
AnonyMoose
August 8, 2011 6:10 pm

I’m learning much more than I wanted to know about Vice Admiral Reef Perkins.

DirkH
August 8, 2011 6:12 pm

Latitude says:
August 8, 2011 at 3:15 pm
“News of the World…………….
Postdoctoral associate in the Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, discovers that tropical corals are limited by temperature.
Postulates as to why tropical corals do not grow off the coast of Norway…..”
I know you explicitly said tropical corals, but anyhow, just wanted to mention that there are corals off the coast of Norway – deep water or cold water corals.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_water_coral

Brian H
August 8, 2011 6:22 pm

And then the skeletal remains are re-colonized by a myriad of drifting algae and larvae, and the new-old reef reappears. Whether it takes a year or a decade or a hundred years, it’s a blink in the history of such sites.

Pamela Gray
August 8, 2011 6:52 pm

Can’t we come up with a list of known flora and fauna and their sensitivities to warm and cold so these doctorate candidates can skip the research part and just write an article? Think of all the money we would save as tax payers and we wouldn’t get any better or worse Ph.D.’s than we have now.

Pamela Gray
August 8, 2011 6:54 pm

I’ll start: Peas won’t grow in hot weather and cabbage will bolt. Pumpkins and toms will not ripen in cold weather. Winter wheat is hardier than spring wheat regarding cold weather. I have a long list. And climate science wannabes interested?

jones
August 8, 2011 7:16 pm

starzmom says:
August 8, 2011 at 3:07 pm
Once again, it’s worse than we thought!
No starz……..it’s worse……

Steve K.
August 8, 2011 7:18 pm

So what did these reefs do during the last ice age (and the one before that, etc.)? Wouldn’t that have wiped the reefs out good and hard?

timetochooseagain
August 8, 2011 7:54 pm

If said trend in the “NAO” continues, they expect more cold snaps in the future. Hm…that’s a pretty big if. The “NAO” is quite variable, and does not bear any obvious relationship to anything that would suggest a long term trend that “will continue”:
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/data/teledoc/nao.timeseries.gif

crosspatch
August 8, 2011 8:00 pm

It takes only one single cold night a few degrees below normal to destroy a crop.

SteveSadlov
August 8, 2011 8:11 pm

Some environmentalists claim we are in the midst of an extinction. They are misguided. This is no extinction. When the interglacial ends, there may be an actual extinction. If so, it will be ugly.

trbixler
August 8, 2011 8:13 pm

Will the coral reefs in the Arctic be affected. Grant money needed for the study oversight.

timetochooseagain
August 8, 2011 8:32 pm

Heh, breaking news, life that thrives in a subtropical environment doesn’t like cold weather.

Pete H
August 8, 2011 8:40 pm

Anyone owning a marine fish tank could have told you that but this lot get paid for it!
John W says:
August 8, 2011 at 6:05 pm
“Imagine that, G. Schmidt is involved with alarming research findings,”
John, I think you are referring to Gavin rather than the one here named Gregory. (Not sure if they are related though 😉 )

jorgekafkazar
August 8, 2011 8:48 pm

“It was the saddest thing I’ve ever seen,” Kemp said.
Obviously he’s not been paying much attention to the state of peer review, scientific publications, and climatology, lately.

Steve Oregon
August 8, 2011 8:53 pm

It’s amazing how academia has come up with the justification for monitoring almost everything just to watch for any changes so they can speculate on what’s happening.
Here in Oregon they used the fabricated AGW link to dead zones and ocean acidification to create 5 Marine Reserves where they are now busy watching everything that happens.
Piles of papers will be produced reporting on what they have seen with analysis and conclusions limited only by their imaginations. Most of which will have zero value for anything at all.
Meanwhile all that money they have wasted counting waves, watching sand blow and the little critters scrambling could have gone to real progress.

Anna Lemma
August 8, 2011 8:56 pm

Can’t find it, but I read somewhere that corals have almost gone extinct at least four times in the last 200 million years, then come back. Maybe someone here can offer a citation. But if that’s true it would indicate that corals are sensitive on the one hand, yet resilient on the other.

DCC
August 8, 2011 9:13 pm

Vic said: ” I find it worrying that 200 to 300 year old corals could all just die off so suddenly like that.”
Not to worry, that’s the topic of the next PhD to be minted at UGA Hokum Odum.

crosspatch
August 8, 2011 9:27 pm

Huge coral reefs would have been killed during the last glaciation. The Great Barrier Reef would have been hundreds of feet above sea level. There should be rather extensive dead reefs in areas that are now submerged too deep to sustain growth since the Holocene raised water levels. Has anyone looked for these?

George E. Smith
August 8, 2011 10:11 pm

Well finally after millions of years, the water got colder in the Florida Keys.
Gee! why does all of ths mayhem seem to happen, while I am down fishing in Baja, where it is nice and toasty.

August 8, 2011 10:13 pm

These kind of studies in ecology all point to life being unusually sensitive to their environments, It’s almost like they are trying to prove that life just existed when and where they found it in it’s current form and did not evolve by adapting to extremes or to the environment.
If some of the coral survived the colder temperatures then obviously the next batch of coral that came from the survivors would be more hardy (how ever slightly) to the cold and so on, where’s the study that explains this process in coral? maybe corals evolve and adapt to their environments a lot quicker than they understand, what effect does an Ice age have on corrals?
Extremophiles shouldn’t even exist on the fantasy planet they are studying because I don’t honestly think they are describing this planet realistically for it to be called science.

August 8, 2011 11:37 pm

Cross patch – 8/8 9.27 pm. You are right there. After the sea level rises post glaciation, and the monsoon area up top end arrived, (The big wet known as this time) Aborigines started to move onto estuary and coast areas. However, I read somewhere that the oil spill last year or was it the year before (time flies eh?) was affecting the gulf stream. In fact one article said it had stopped. And they were thinking of putting
giant fans under the sea to stimulate this. (I wonder what type of electricity if any they would use, LOL) to keep the warmer water circulating. I wonder how Bermuda is faring.

August 8, 2011 11:43 pm

The longer term North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) has entered strongly into the negative territory, but it takes time for all relevant effects to take place. Likelihood is that it could last for few years to come. Origin of it is to the south of Greenland and Iceland, some experts consider it to be self-sustaining feedback between the ocean (subpolar gyre) and the atmosphere (Icelandic low pressure system diverting the jet stream) but they are uncertain about underlying causes, but one thing appear to be certain, it is nothing to do with the anthropogenic warming and CO2. Here are few basic details as I see them:
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/NAOn.htm

J.Hansford
August 9, 2011 1:53 am

Corals die in extreme temperatures…….. Omigod!!!!! Call a Marine Biologist and give them a life time government grant!!!!!
Sorry if my sarcasm has overwhelmed my intense concern….. Yawn. 😉

View from the Solent
August 9, 2011 4:40 am

“..leading to a potential net loss of carbon transferred from the algae to the coral..”
Fools! It’s the algae that’s killing the coral with evil, poisonous carbon. Why can’t they see it?

Dave Springer
August 9, 2011 5:36 am

Save the Corals – Burn More Coal!
Who knew?