Why The Parrotfish Should Be The National Bird

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

Ecological alarmist scares have a lot in common with zombies. They seem to eat up people’s brains, they are mindless themselves, and most important, they are really, really hard to kill. Take for example the long-discredited idea, first overthrown by Charles Darwin, that coral atolls are under threat from sea level rise. Darwin showed that to the contrary, coral atoll were created by rising sea levels.

Despite being totally untrue, this nursery tale of rising sea levels threatening coral atolls was resurrected by the Sierra Club regarding the supposed fate of the South Pacific island state of Tuvalu, and used by the Sierra Club and other environmental non-governmental organizations (NGOs) as a cautionary tale to promote expensive energy.

Since then, a number of folks including myself have pointed out how ludicrous the claim is. And a study of historical aerial photos of the Pacific atolls by Webb and Kench showed that despite the rising sea levels, a majority of the atolls had either stayed the same or, in many cases, increased in size. To quote from the paper, “Results show that 86% of islands remained stable (43%) or increased in area (43%) over the timeframe of analysis.” And since the sea level was rising all that time, the claims of the Sierra Club have been shown to be total nonsense. But the bogus claim lives on, I read it again this week, so clearly not everyone has gotten the word.

Since I’m telling the story again, I’ll use a previous illustration, for two reasons. First, because it shows exactly how a coral atoll is built and sustained, and second, I drew it and as a result I am quite unjustifiably proud of it …

atoll_xsect_100127

Figure 1. Cross section through a typical coral atoll. The living coral is shown in light green, and it is in the ring of shallow water between the dotted green line and the beach. The atoll used for the photo in this example is Tepoto Atoll, French Polynesia.

Now, undaunted by the untruth of their claims, the PR campaign goes on, with the atoll nation of the Maldives pulling stunts like an underwater cabinet meeting to try to raise money from their imaginary “plight” … in fact, begging for funds because your coral atoll is under threat from rising sea levels seems to be developing into a bit of a cottage industry.

So to provide a counterweight to this recurring myth, to drive yet another stake through the heart of this zombie, let me repeat the story of why the parrotfish should be the national bird of every coral atoll state and nation. I’ll give you the tale in a nutshell.

Coral atolls are not a solid “island” as we understand an island. They are not a solid chunk of land surrounded by water. Instead they are best thought of as a momentary hesitation in a (hopefully) continuous slow-motion river of coral rubble and sand. This slow-motion river is composed of nothing more or less than the bones of the reef itself, the broken off and ground up parts of the reef’s coral skeleton. A healthy reef grows ceaselessly, and its upper limbs are constantly being broken off by the endless waves when they dare grow too near to the life-giving light. This coral rubble is slowly swept by the waves up onto the atoll, and from there it is equally slowly returned by waves and wind back to the ocean.

The sad truth is, coral atolls are not held together by anything except temporal inertia. They are nothing but a loose pile of coral rubble and sand. And as you might imagine, such an unconsolidated pile is eaten away by every stray current and wind and footstep. Every moment of every day, every coral atoll on the planet is losing its precious land, eroded back into the ocean by the ceaseless pull of gravity, wind, and waves.

So how do coral atolls survive? Obviously, for an atoll to survive the ceaseless loss of its land to erosion, it must be continually replenished by an equally ceaseless supply of coral rubble and sand.

And if that supply of rubble and sand slows, the atoll shrinks. If that supply slows, the freshwater lens shrinks.

And if the reef dies, if that endless supply of cast-off coral stops?

The atoll disappears. Might take five years or fifty, but if the reef dies, the atoll disappears.

So the story in a nutshell is this:

Coral atolls grow and shrink, not based on sea level rise, but based on the health and vitality and extent of their coral reef—the unseen source of the (hopefully) endless river of coral rubble sand that keeps the atoll from vanishing.

The amazing thing about humans and coral atolls is that we can live there at all. There is a small freshwater lens that provides  a bit of water. This lens is not contained by anything, but actually floats on top of the underground surface of the salt water that interpenetrates the lower part of the atoll. If you pump the lens of fresh water too much, you start pumping seawater. When there’s not enough rain, the well water becomes brackish. There is generally no topsoil worthy of the name, just salty coral sand mixed with a small bit of organic material. There are no sources of energy, no forests for wood, no oil or coal. There are not a lot of plants that can survive at all under such conditions. And the very existence of the atoll itself is at the mercy of the health of the reef, not to mention the occasional hurricane that can overtop the reef and push the pile of rubble and sand right back into the ocean, or wipe away one end, or cut a channel right through the middle. It is a tenuous existence even at the best of times.

So what is the real threat to the coral atolls? What’s the true story regarding the Sierra Club’s description of the washing away of part of an atoll in Tuvalu? Why do the islanders report that they are drawing salty water out of their wells?

The answer is that indeed these problems are the fault of humans … just not by way of CO2.

The big threat to the existence of the atolls comes from the local inhabitants mistreating the reef that keeps their heads above water.

And the big threat to the atolls’ fresh water supply is the combination of reef destruction and overpopulation.

For example, the folks in the Maldives have built a number of lovely tourist hotels. Of course, to build them you need mortar and concrete, and for that you need sand. Coral sand makes terrible concrete, but it’s all they have. There is no quartz beach sand available to build with, just chunks of coral and coral sand. So the Maldivians mined the coral from their reefs to use to build their hotels and houses. Then they brought in scads of tourists every year, to help them drink up the freshwater lens … and now they are saying that the industrialized nations should compensate them because their well water is brackish, and the atolls are washing away.

Now, as you might imagine, the truth in this tale is not popular in the atolls at all. Like everyone else in the world, folks there would much rather believe that their troubles are anyone’s fault but their own. So I understand them desperately trying to prop up the false narrative about CO2 and sea level rise being the culprits. When you live in a place that has nothing, you need to grab for every chance you can.

But I’m a man who grew up in the middle of the forest, and has worked extensively as a commercial fisherman. And like many people with that background, I’ve been a devoted environmentalist for my entire adult life.

Which is why I feel so betrayed by the hijacking of the big environmental NGOs by people obsessed with raising energy prices and restricting fossil fuel use. I can understand the islanders continuing the charade. I can’t understand the environmental NGOs not acknowledging their mistake regarding sea level rise, and moving on.

Because far from admitting that they were wrong, the Sierra Club and Greenpeace and the like are still making these same bogus claims of danger to coral atolls from sea level rise, centuries after Darwin first showed them wrong, and when their claims have been shown untrue by actual measurement of the atolls involved.

This hijacking of the big environmental NGOs by anti-development forces directly harms the environment in a number of ways.

First, every dollar the environmental organizations spend on trying to raise energy prices (by attacking CO2) is a dollar not going to its declared purpose of helping the environment.

Second, the misidentification of the cause of atoll deterioration as being sea level rise has prevented people from noticing, addressing and correcting the actual causes of atoll deterioration, which are reef health and human overpopulation.

Third, blaming the innocent (far-away users of fossil fuels) for the woes that the atoll dwellers have brought on themselves just angers the unjustly accused. It doesn’t lead to solutions.

Fourth, it has led to a cottage industry of demanding reparation for atoll damage. Since the demands for reparation are being made by the very people who are actually causing the damage, this will not end well.

Fifth, and most important, the focus on raising energy prices (to reduce CO2 emissions) keeps the third world poor. The effects are already being felt in such actions as the World Bank denying loans for coal-fired plants in India.

How does that hurt the environment? The sad reality is that only when people have their basic needs covered can they afford to worry about the environment. No country has ever undertaken serious environmental repair and restoration until the people were generally well fed and clothed.

And inexpensive energy is an indispensable part of that equation. When did inexpensive energy turn from being the “savior of the American farmer” to being something that Western rich folks are denying to India?

The push for expensive energy by the “environmental” NGOs is hugely damaging to the economies of the poor countries, and through them, to the environment itself.

Because if the poor folk in Africa cannot get inexpensive energy for cooking and heating, they will eventually cut down every forest and burn up every stick of firewood on the continent. They will hate to do it, they will mourn the destruction … but unless and until they have some other way to cook and heat, the environment will be under huge destructive pressure. It’s a crazy, all-too-human paradox, that the only thing that can possibly save the global environment is the very economic development that many environmentalists oppose. And my concern for the environment is one reason that I’ve spent a good chunk of my life living in poor countries and working on their economic development.

So that’s why I feel betrayed. The same environmental organizations whose founding I cheered decades ago because they were protecting the environment, have morphed into monsters which are actively harming the environment in a host of ways, and setting humans at each other’s throats over imagined wrongs. Even worse, they think that inexpensive energy and economic development are the dangers … when the truth is that  when half the planet is living on a couple bucks a day, inexpensive energy and economic development are the only things that will save us from slow-motion ecological catastrophe. I’m deadly serious.

The poor folks in Africa will burn every tree on the continent if the economic conditions demand it, and I would too if my kids were hungry. When your kids are hungry, all the barriers are down, all the boundaries are meaningless. Environmental destruction means nothing to a hungry man, and even less to a woman with hungry kids.  I once asked a firewood seller in Costa Rica where he was cutting his firewood. “En el Parque Nacionál,” he said, “In the National Park”. I asked politely whether that might be, well,  you know … illegal … “Oh, yes,” he said, “I feel bad about that, but when my children are hungry, what can I do?”

I had no answer for him.

And that is how, paradoxically and tragically, the anti-development, pro-expensive energy actions of the big environmental NGO’s are doing huge, present, and continuing damage to the poor and through them to the environment the NGOs are supposed to protect.

Now, does this make me want to stop being an environmentalist? Not at all. I know that the only way that my as-yet-hypothetical grandkids will be able to be commercial fisherfolk is if we take care that we don’t damage the ocean. Protecting the ecosystems and the natural resources are a no-brainer for anyone actively involved with the natural world.

So in response, about all that I can do is to not go gentle into that good night. This is me raging against the passing of the light.

And where do the parrotfish fit into all of this?

Well, as I’ve mentioned elsewhere, parrotfish use their hard beaks to bite off chunks of coral. These chunks of coral are ground into sand by hard plates in the parrotfish’s throat. The parrotfish digests what’s digestible, and excretes copious amounts of the finest, loveliest, tropical beach sand. It’s interesting to watch, because they have to grind up a lot of coral to get  a little food. As a result, sometimes when a school of them is surprised by something, and the whole school decides to simultaneously “dump the ballast and run”, the water where they were is instantly filled with a cloud of slowly descending pure white sand, while the parrotfish are now well down the reef.

Yes, it’s true. All of those lovely tropical beaches? They’ve mostly composed of coral that was lovingly hand-ground by parrotfish.

But creating tropical beaches, that’s just the benefit to the humans. The parrotfish are also vital to the health of the reef. This is because a coral reef is always in competition with various kinds of algae and plants. Since the coral reef is the only solid surface available, various green things are always trying to colonize the surface. This is to the detriment of the coral polyps who are building the reef. The grazing of the parrotfish is a major mechanism for keeping the greenery from overtaking the reef … I’ve seen overgrown reefs, and they’re not a pretty picture.

The parrotfish also exposes fresh coral surfaces when it bites out chunks of coral. These are then available for colonization by further coral polyps. As with most natural systems, the presence of grazers greatly increases the health and productivity of the reef ecosystem. And in addition to creating sand, when the fish are grazing they also break loose chunks of coral … coral that will eventually end up added to the atoll itself.

As a result, parrotfish are a “keystone species”, a species of special importance in the life of an ecosystem. The sad news is, the parrotfish sleep at night on reef, wrapped in a shroud of mucus. Strangest thing you every saw, you can go right up to them. As a result, since the onset of waterproof flashlights, locals and tourists have stripped many reefs of their parrotfish. Without the protection of the parrotfish, the reef declines, algae advances, and the sand production stops … and when the reef declines, the atoll shrinks and the lens of freshwater gets smaller …

And that is why the parrotfish should be the national bird of every tropical coral atoll—because without them the atoll is in trouble. It should not be fished for the market, it should not be killed by night divers to be served in restaurants. It should be off-limits, a protected species, both as a practical matter for the continued health of the reef, and as a symbol of the importance of the reef upon which depends the very existence of the atoll itself.

Is making the reef healthy all it will take to save the atolls? Well … no. They also have to stop the population growth. A coral atoll is tiny, only a few square kilometres of land. More importantly, the fresh water lens is correspondingly small. Since it is only replenished by rain, this limited water puts a practical maximum on the island population, a maximum which these days is routinely exceeded … and then they complain that rising sea levels are making their wells brackish. The wells are indeed getting brackish … but not from rising sea levels.

Like I said, this is not a popular message in the atolls, but unfortunately it’s the truth. I’d like to say that there’s some silver bullet for the atoll problems, but I don’t know of one. So all I can do is keep telling the real story, in the hope of counteracting the destructive propaganda coming from the Sierra Club and other environmental NGOs … I figure I may not slay the Hydra, but at least I might get a-head …

w.

PS—please be clear that I am not speaking against the environmental movement, of which I have long counted myself as an active member. In large part, the movement is made up of local people working on important local issues.

Nor am I speaking against the real environmental gains that we humans have made. The cleaning of the rivers and the air in much of the industrialized world is a story of achievement and hope.

I am talking about the change in many of the big environmental organizations, which for better or for worse are the public face of the movement. The organizations have transmuted from being for responsible development and for the environment, to being against all development and thus actively harming the environment.

The environmental NGOs’ fight against affordable inexpensive energy is a modern tragedy. Inexpensive energy is the only hope for the poor of the planet, and the economic development of the poor is necessary BEFORE a country can start addressing environmental issues. As a result, the NGOs’ war on inexpensive energy is causing huge, long-term environmental damage.

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John Tillman
June 13, 2013 11:16 am

Peter:
I prefer Catastrophic Anthropogenic Climate Change Alarmism (CACCA).

June 13, 2013 11:17 am

Willis, I don’t understand the near surface geology of the atolls. What sort of foundation do the buildings have–sand or rock? How far down is the bedrock? How old? How is it formed? How thick is the sand? What is the average elevation of the atolls? Why? Thanks, –AGF

Peter in MD
June 13, 2013 11:17 am

John Tillman:
Touche’

Tom Jones
June 13, 2013 11:24 am

thedumbsociety says:
June 13, 2013 at 1:12 am
Doesn’t this show the sea level is rising? (perhaps not as much as was forecast…)
Examine it closely, and you will find that the reason that there is such wild variation is that sea level is measured with tideguages which measure how much water there is over the ocean floor, which means that an area where the floor is subsiding rapidly is interpreted as a gigantic rise in sea level. My personal favorite is the mouth of the Chesapeake, where a really staggering rise in sea level is within eyesight of a very small rise on the other side of the bay. When in doubt, satellite measurements can clarify.

Duster
June 13, 2013 11:29 am

Steve says:
June 13, 2013 at 12:53 am
So there is no proof of rising sea levels?

Sea levels are like climate. They always change. The idea that there is some steady state is a myth and not even a scientific one. One point that Willis omitted in his brilliant summary of atoll formation is that the islands themselves are in motion. The linear pattern of the Hawaiian Islands – not atolls yet – is a good example. The oceanic crust it self is in motion. A mantle plume rises (very roughly speaking) beneath the big island of Hawaii. As the crust rides over the plume an island with active volcanoes forms (there’s a new one forming still below the surface southeast of Hawaii), the island with the active volcanoes moves away from the plume and goes quiet. You can follow a chain of underwater sea mounts, and coral reefs that are all on extinct volcanoes northwest from the Hawaiian Islands – which are not atolls – to the Midway Islands – which are. The chain of sea mounts continues northwest with a kink, eventually vanishing into the junction between the trenches bounding the Pacific plate along the Aleutian and Kurile Islands. Look on Google Earth. Every atoll is on an extinct volcano and every one of those is riding a slow motion conveyor carrying them away from an elevated surface over a plume or off the apex of a midocean ridge toward the abyssal plain.
Other causes for sea level rise include ocean water warming and expanding, isostatic rebound as lands formerly under an ice sheet gradually rise while the plastically deformed land around the borders sinks back. Back on the Crimean Penninsula I’ve see Roman and Classical Greek vineyard patterns under the Black Sea that were gradually inundated as a result of isostatic rebound effects. There is no single cause of changes in sea level.

dp
June 13, 2013 11:37 am

Willis – I’m not disagreeing with your article – but it is a fact that there are drowned atolls out there as a result of the post-glacial sea rise. It rose faster than the rebuilding can keep up. Except for that extreme circumstance, coral reefs are perfectly self-sustaining for natural trends of sea level change. You like to tell people you’re not going to do their homework – I’m not so inclined, so here is a trail head of what submerged (drowned) atolls look like: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chagos_Archipelago and it would be very easy for the uninformed to believe these are victims of human-caused global warming. See more at Penguin Bank, Hawaii. During the glacial period they were true islands. They’re not victims of modern sea level rise. Islands sometimes simply sink over time as well as being drowned by glacial melt.
Islands that have been permanently over-topped by rapidly rising seas can have remnant coral present. The process of being flooded includes oceanic scouring, and as you say, atolls, the tops of seamounts, are largely rubble. Most of the formations in the Hawaii archipelago are former islands turned atoll turned reef turned seamount. This is typical of the volcanic island life cycle and as we agree, have nothing to do with sea level rise.
I was attempting to clarify for a sub-conversation how atolls can become drowned. I provided causes other than natural non-glacial sea level rise. I’m aware of no atolls that are drowned by sea level creep that follows initial glacial melt and subsequent sea level expansion do to warming of that melt water. I also didn’t mention volcanic explosions and sloughing of above and undersea formations which can also cause rapid permanent flooding.
I’m not a sailor – I’ve worked on and around boats, yachts, barges, tugs (harbor and ocean), drilling platforms, large freighters, container ships, and oil tankers for decades, though. I don’t talk or write like a sailor but I can. Reefs, shoals, sand bars, seamounts, atolls, barrier islands, etc. all have broad and often colloquial meaning. It is generally understood that reefs are a submerged formation (one presumes mean tide) and that atolls can be trod upon and even populated. Reefs can be atolls that have suffered a typhoon strike and all surface material has been displaced leaving only an underwater formation. These become atolls again, given time. I’ll defer to sailor field experience to put a finer point on it.
Thank you again for this fine article. Here is a PBS article that should serve as a “Here’s your sign” moment for people who don’t understand islands: http://www.pbs.org/frontlineworld/rough/2005/12/tuvalu_that_sin_1.html – the comments are pretty much the only place you will find any intelligence on that page. That page is why your article is so important.

June 13, 2013 12:30 pm

So did SLR sink the Hawaiian reefs when the ice sheet melted? Rather the cold fresh surface water released probably did them in. And the Great Barrier Reef was submerged while not so distant atolls survived–again SLR may have had little or nothing to do with it. Maybe the vast shallow water was too warm for the coral to survive, which was no problem on small islands. Insufficient nutrients might have contributed. –AGF

ajb
June 13, 2013 1:02 pm

Steve in SC said: “The Bikini garment has shrunk in response to global warming.”
Statements like this should not be made without scientific evidence to back it up. We need to form a team of researchers immediately to gather evidence and determine whether this statement is valid. Any volunteers?

u.k(us)
June 13, 2013 1:03 pm

agfosterjr says:
June 13, 2013 at 11:17 am
Willis, I don’t understand the near surface geology of the atolls. What sort of foundation do the buildings have–sand or rock? How far down is the bedrock? How old? How is it formed? How thick is the sand? What is the average elevation of the atolls? Why? Thanks, –AGF
===============
You certainly are not the first to ask that question.
90 seconds on a google search returned this:
http://www.sil.si.edu/DigitalCollections/atollresearchbulletin/issues/00050.pdf
Enjoy

Jimbo
June 13, 2013 1:13 pm

Steve says:
June 13, 2013 at 12:53 am
So there is no proof of rising sea levels?

Sea level has been rising for well over 12,000 years and continues today. There is no dispute there. The dispute is whether coral island atolls are doomed. As shown above history says no UNLESS something remarkable happens or the islanders destroy the fabric of their islands that has defied past sea level rises.
In the past few thousand years the rate of rise has been flattening. There is no evidence of an acceleration in the rate of sea level rise this century. Sea levels can rise in one geographic location and fall in another at the same time. Land rises and falls too.
See the graph below to get an overall idea.
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Post-Glacial_Sea_Level.png
PS, Bangladesh has gained land mass over the past several decades!

June 13, 2013 1:24 pm

Very well said.
The environmental movement has has morphed into clubs for people who are affluent enough that they can afford to resist development in their own backyard, and they think that gives them the right to dictate to the rest of the world what development should be allowed in other’s backyards.

June 13, 2013 1:47 pm

u.k(us) says:
June 13, 2013 at 1:03 pm
========================================
Thanks for the link. It reads (from 1956):
“Other similar reef flats reported from many islands of the Pacific suggest, as stated by various geologists, that this widespread feature is the effect of a recent lowering of sea level with the resultant death of all corals back from the reef edge, followed by a a beveling of higher parts of the reef structure.”
So the question is (leaving CACCA totally aside), can this be reconciled with WE’s theory of long term dry atoll maintenance, or do the atolls spend the majority of their existence submerged? –AGF

June 13, 2013 1:53 pm

So to provide a counterweight to this recurring myth, to drive yet another stake through the heart of this zombie, ..

You’re mixing your mythological metaphors; you kill a vampire with a stake through the heart whereas zombies must be decapitated or in some other way separated from all brain matter, as with a 12 ga. slug through the head.
If you’ve been staking zombies through the heart all this time, no wonder you’ve been having problems!

June 13, 2013 2:03 pm

The Island of Yap is inhabited by non-Polynesians (very early Micronesians?) while its surrounding islands are inhabited by Polynesians. I used to think this was due to the peripheral island inhabitants being wiped out by hurricanes, leaving room for far roaming Polynesians to settle, but maybe lowered sea level left the islands newly available for colonization. –AGF

June 13, 2013 2:26 pm

Steve says:
June 13, 2013 at 12:53 am

So there is no proof of rising sea levels?

I know WIllis’ articles are long and peppered with diversions, but I always find them interesting and well worth reading all the way through. At what point did you stop reading? There is nothing in the post you could construe as Willis claiming sea levels are not rising.
Go back to the beginning and read all the way through this time.

Duster
June 13, 2013 3:05 pm

Ryan says:
June 13, 2013 at 5:14 am
The tropical paciic is full of drowned fringing reefs. It is odd that someone could write such a long piece and still fail to mention that rising seas have wiped out thousands of atoll islands in the past. Does human development threaten them as well? Yes.
Are most atolls all going to be fine when oceans rise a meter or more? No.

You evidently have not heard of, or at least not understood the idea of plate tectonics and what that means about sea floors and islands in the sea. Nor have you considered the implications of the end of the last glacial epoch with respect to atolls. Might want to before propounding about coral reefs.

Frank Luchan
June 13, 2013 3:29 pm

Both of my daughters had to go through 10 days of ‘climate change indoctrination’ in their elementary and middle school here in Texas this past year. I had to hold my temper as each day passed and I made my daughters regurgitate the nonsense these ‘teachers’ were propagating. I I am going to recommend to the school board and principal(s) that this article, as well as much of the writing of Willis be mandatory reading alongside any supposed ‘climate change science’ that is presented to our most impressionable youth.

Pedantic old Fart
June 13, 2013 5:16 pm

Thank you Willis for a beautiful piece of writing. You have very eloquently given voice to the feelings I have experienced as I have watched, ignored, while conservation organizations I once supported,in one case founded,have rushed off to campaign against CO2. Gone are the times when days were spent determining the best knowledge, ensuring that our message was as true as possible while bending our efforts to helping our local environment. I think that concentrating on habitat preservation and restoration locally would be less risky idealocically. The Cairns and Far North Environment Centre recenrly emailed me to urge me to take a camera to the Cairns sea front and get photos of the effects of the recent maximum spring tides. They wanted to be able to select photos they could use to convince people of the dire results of anthropogenic sea level rise. They wondered why I was outraged!
Thank you also for your insights into the ecolocical significance of the parrot fish. I have spent hours following them around. Yet , I am ashamed to admit, the significance of some of what I have odserved failed to register.

June 13, 2013 7:42 pm

Colin says:
June 13, 2013 at 9:03 am
I was one of the early Greenpeace members when their focus was on saving whales and protesting atomic testing in the Aleutian Islands. When they actually had scientists on board and they actually made sense
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
I was too, went to large protests over Amchitka and watched as Greenpeace, Suzuki, WWF and others morphed into giant corporations with self interest equivalent to arms manufacturing. How much of their money is used to help the underprivileged versus the “overprivileged”? Great article and lots of good comments. Thanks.

June 13, 2013 7:55 pm

I’m not disagreeing with your article – but it is a fact that there are drowned atolls out there as a result of the post-glacial sea rise. It rose faster than the rebuilding can keep up. Except for that extreme circumstance, coral reefs are perfectly self-sustaining for natural trends of sea level change. You like to tell people you’re not going to do their homework – I’m not so inclined, so here is a trail head of what submerged (drowned) atolls look like: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chagos_Archipelago
The Chagos Archipelago is very tectonically and volcanically active. Those drowned atolls are likely the result of tectonic movements or volcano collapses. Undersea volcanoes are basically a pile of loose rubble and can suddenly collapse leaving their summits significantly lower than before.
There is no evidence of loss of coral reefs at times of sudden sea level changes, such as the start and end of the Younger Dryas. So your speculation that sea level rise is the cause is unlikely to be correct.
There is also the fact sea levels have fallen around 2 meters since the Holocene Optimum, and rises over recent centuries have been much less than this amount. There is no evidence sea level rises have been enough to drown atolls under 10 meters or more of water in this interglacial.

Chuck Bradley
June 13, 2013 9:57 pm

For a good description of the debate about the formation of coral reefs, read “Reef Madness: …” by David Dobbs. Darwin was right, but there were many battles before his insight was confirmed. The … is because I skipped the very long subtitle.

Paul Marko
June 13, 2013 10:18 pm

One argument in favor of adding CO2 to the atmosphere through the burning of fossil fuels, is to replenish the volume stolen by marine organisms for use in their structures, shells, and bones that create carbonate sediment. The massive volumes of calcium carbonate, limestone and dolomite, that fill the geologic columns of the world from the Cambrian to the Recent, were captured by marine life and deposited post mortem in ocean basins never to return to the atmosphere.
We’re fortunate some of that capture pressed from their corpses resulted in petroleum.

dp
June 13, 2013 11:02 pm

Philip – I am not speculating that sea level is rising. It is and has been since the last glacial period. This is stipulated by observation. But it is not alarming. Uneducated Neanderthals have survived worse and I’m certain we could too if it were a problem which it is not. I only brought all this up because others mentioned “drowned” atolls. There are drowned atolls, of course, and I explained why. Now there’s all this, as John Lennon once said.
I’m on your side here – I don’t see the current and past rate of non-glacial flooding caused sea level rise as a problem. I have described the only valid way I’m aware of that islands and atolls “drown” – a description offered by another poster, not me. I’m responding to that other poster. Rapid ocean levels rise when glacial periods end and the ice returns to the sea as water. See more at Cosquers Cave in France regarding sudden and large sea level changes and why they happen. Try to follow the plot. I’m not predicting any sudden rise in sea level – I’m only stating what happens when it does rapidly rise.
Tuvalu is the peak of a pressure ridge caused by plate tectonics. If that ridge building stops or worse, reverses, then Tuvalu will wear down just like any other island. There are 8 stages in the island life cycle which can last millions of years. I learned this as a kid growing up in Hawaii. http://www.bishopmuseum.org/research/nwhi/geoact.html and it is as true today as it was then (then was 1956). This is why most of the seamounts that form the Hawaiian island chain are entirely submerged. Most of the world’s seamounts have never seen the light of day. And I’ll repeat what I said earlier – it has nothing to do with rising sea levels. Islands sink, and islands wear down. It’s natural. Coral atoll formations delay the final stage, but it is only a delay.
If the rebuilding of the coral can keep up with that wearing down then the surface formation will be around a very long time. But the rubble pile can become less stable over time and it is entirely possible it will collapse as a sink hole at some time in the future. Willis’ graphic shows that the living coral lives in a very small range of depth and that part that sits atop the underlying seamount, be it an upthrust like on-shore mountain ranges, or of volcanic origin, once that growth ends the island is doomed to the end game. If the human inhabitants kill off the coral they will kill off the island. That is Willis’ point and it is absolutely true. Inhabitants are not the only threat to coral.

Jon
June 14, 2013 12:47 am

Coral atolls are mostly old volcanos that have sunk back in the sea. That’s why they are roundly shaped. Was is up to 1300 meters down trough coral before they found basalt from the volcano? So if coral atolls have survived up to 1300 meters of “sea level rise” why is another meter a such big problem?

milodonharlani
June 14, 2013 9:59 am

Jon says:
June 14, 2013 at 12:47 am
Coral atolls are mostly old volcanos that have sunk back in the sea. That’s why they are roundly shaped. Was is up to 1300 meters down trough coral before they found basalt from the volcano? So if coral atolls have survived up to 1300 meters of “sea level rise” why is another meter a such big problem?
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Further sea level rise would only endanger corals if it was so rapid that the creatures were suddenly covered by too much water for sufficient sunlight to penetrate to their new depth. Most tropical reef-building corals need photosynthetic algal symbionts to survive. Those which don’t rely on associated algae can however live in deeper, colder water.
As an aside, here’s what Darwin wrote in his “Recollections” about his thoughts on coral reefs: “No other work of mine was begun in so deductive a spirit as this; for the whole theory was thought out on the west coast of S. America before I had seen a true coral reef. I had therefore only to verify and extend my views by a careful examination of living reefs.”
Historians question to what extent Darwin’s full hypothesis of reef & lagoon formation was “thought out” before studying reefs in the Pacific & Indian Oceans, but it does appear that the basic idea of a sinking mountain did occur to him before having seen an actual coral island or atoll. The evidence is slim, but doesn’t rule out his later autobiographical statement.
http://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/darwin-coral-reefs
The reference doesn’t quote him on Tahiti, but Darwin wrote that seeing still emergent islands fringed with corals & barrier reefs confirmed him in his prior speculations.