Falling Sea Level: The Critical Factor in 2016 Great Barrier Reef Bleaching!

Guest essay by Jim Steele

Director emeritus Sierra Nevada Field Campus, San Francisco State University and author of Landscapes & Cycles: An Environmentalist’s Journey to Climate Skepticism

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It is puzzling why the recent 2017 publication in Nature, Global Warming And Recurrent Mass Bleaching Of Corals by Hughes et al. ignored the most critical factor affecting the 2016 severe bleaching along the northern Great Barrier Reef – the regional fall in sea level amplified by El Niño. Instead Hughes 2017 suggested the extensive bleaching was due to increased water temperatures induced by CO2 warming.

In contrast in Coral Mortality Induced by the 2015–2016 El-Niño in Indonesia: The Effect Of Rapid Sea Level Fall by Ampou 2017, Indonesian biologists had reported that a drop in sea level had bleached the upper 15 cm of the reefs before temperatures had reached NOAA’ Coral Reef Watch’s bleaching thresholds. As discussed by Ampou 2017, the drop in sea level had likely been experienced throughout much of the Coral Triangle including the northern Great Barrier Reef (GBR), and then accelerated during the El Niño. They speculated sea level fall also contributed to the bleaching during the 1998 El Niño. Consistent with the effects of sea level fall, other researchers reported bleaching in the GBR was greatest near the surface then declined rapidly with depth. Indeed if falling sea level was the main diver in 2016’s reef mortalities, and this can be tested, then most catastrophic assertions made by Hughes 2017 would be invalid.

Indeed the Great Barrier Reef had also experienced falling sea levels similar to those experienced by Indonesian reefs. Visitors to Lizard Island had reported more extreme low tides and more exposed reefs as revealed in the photograph above, which is consistent with the extremely high mortality in the Lizard Island region during the 2016 El Niño. Of course reefs are often exposed to the air at low tide, but manage to survive if the exposure is short or during the night. However as seen in tide gauge data from Cairns just south of Lizard Island, since 2010 the average low tide had dropped by ~10 to 15 cm. After previous decades of increasing sea level had permitted vertical coral growth and colonization of newly submerged coastline, that new growth was now being left high and dry during low tide. As a result shallow coral were increasingly vulnerable to deadly desiccation during more extreme sea level drops when warm waters slosh toward the Americas during an El Niño.

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Furthermore, an El Niño in the Coral Triangle not only causes a sudden sea level fall, but it also generates a drier high-pressure system with clear skies, so that this region is exposed to more intense solar irradiance. In addition, El Niño conditions reduce regional winds that drive reef-flushing currents and produce greater wave washing that could minimize desiccation during extreme low tides. And as one would predict, these conditions were exactly what were observed during El Niño 2016 around Lizard Island and throughout the northern GBR.

Aerial surveys, on which Hughes 2017 based their analyses, cannot discriminate between the various causes of bleaching. To determine the cause of coral mortality, careful examination of bleached coral by divers is required to distinguish whether bleached coral were the result of storms, crown-of-thorns attacks, disease, aerial exposure during low tides, or anomalously warmer ocean waters. Crown-of-thorns leave diagnostic gnawing marks, while storms produce anomalous rubble. Furthermore aerial surveys only measure the aerial extent of bleaching, but cannot determine the depth to which most bleaching was restricted due to sea level fall. To distinguish bleaching and mortality caused by low tide exposure, divers must measure the extent of tissue mortality and compare it with changes in sea level. For example, the Indonesian researchers found the extent of dead coral tissue was mostly relegated to the upper 15 cm of coral, which correlated with the degree of increased aerial exposure by recent low tides. Unfortunately Hughes et al never carried out, or never reported, such critical measurements.

However a before-and-after photograph presented in Hughes 2017 suggested the severe GBR bleaching they attributed to global warming primarily happened between February and late April. Their aerial surveys occurred between March 22 and April 17, 2016. And consistent with low tide bleaching, that is exactly the time frame that tide tables reveal reefs experienced two bouts of extreme low tides coinciding with the heat of the afternoon (March 7-11 & April 5-10). And such a combination of sun and low tide are known to be deadly.

A study of a September 2005 bleaching event on Pelorous and Orpheus Islands in the central GBR by Anthony 2007, Coral Mortality Following Extreme Low Tides And High Solar Radiation, had reported extreme deadly effects when extreme low tides coincided with high solar irradiance periods around midday. As in Indonesia, they also reported bleaching and mortality had occurred despite water temperatures that were “significantly lower than the threshold temperature for coral bleaching in this region (Berkelmans 2002), and therefore unlikely to represent a significant stress factor.” Along the reef crests and flats, “40 and 75% of colonies in the major coral taxa were either bleached or suffered partial mortality. In contrast, corals at wave exposed sites were largely unaffected (<1% of the corals were bleached), as periodic washing of any exposed coral by waves prevented desiccation. Surveys along a 1–9 m depth gradient indicated that high coral mortality was confined to the tidal zone.” [Emphasis mine]

The fortuitous timing of Ampou’s coral habitat mapping from 2014 to 2016 in Bunaken National Park (located at the northwest tip of Sulawesi, Indonesia) allowed researchers to estimate the time of coral mortality relative to sea level and temperature changes. Ampou reported that in “September 2015, altimetry data show that sea level was at its lowest in the past 12 years, affecting corals living in the bathymetric range exposed to unusual emersion. By March 2016, Bunaken Island (North Sulawesi) displayed up to 85% mortality on reef flats” and that almost “all reef flats showed evidence of mortality, representing 30% of Bunaken reefs.” Based on the timing of reef deaths and changes in temperature they concluded, “the wide mortality we observed can not be simply explained by ocean warming due to El Niño.” They concluded, “The clear link between mortality and sea level fall, also calls for a refinement of the hierarchy of El Niño impacts and their consequences on coral reefs.”

From the illustrations (below) of a generalized topography of a fringing or barrier reef, we can predict the effects of low sea level by examining where bleaching and mortality would occur within the whole reef system. Coral occupying the reef crests are most sensitive to drops in sea level and desiccation because they are first to be exposed to dangerous periods of aerial exposure and last to re-submerge. The inner reef flats are vulnerable to lower sea levels, as those shallow waters are more readily exposed at low tide because the reef crest prevents ocean waters from flooding the flats. If reefs flats are not exposed, the shallow waters that remain can heat up dangerously fast. Accordingly Anthony 2007 found 40 to 75%, and Ampou 2017 found 85% of the reef flats had bleached. In contrast coral in the fore reefs are the least vulnerable to desiccation and higher temperatures due to direct contact with the ocean, upwelling and wave washing. Accordingly Anthony 2007 reported <1% bleaching in the fore reefs.

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Coral mortality due to a drop in sea level leaves other diagnostic telltale signs such as micro-atoll formation. As illustrated below in Fig. 4 from Goodwin 2008, during neap low tides (MLWN) sea water can still pass over the reef crest and flush the inner reef with relatively cooler outer ocean water. However during the low spring tides (MLWS), the reef crest is exposed and ocean water is prevented from reaching the reef flats. As mean sea level falls (MSL), coral on the crest and flats are increasingly exposed to the air for longer periods, and the upper layer of coral that had previously kept up with decades of rising sea level, are now exposed to increasing periods of desiccation and higher mortality.

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There are over 43 species in the coral triangle that can be characterized as “keep-up” coral whose growth rates are much greater than average 20th century sea level rise. However their vertical growth is limited by the average low water level (HLC-Height of Living Coral in Fig. 4). Average low water level is calculated as the mean water level between low neap tides and lower low spring tides. (Due to the linear alignment of the sun, earth and moon and the resulting stronger gravitational pull during a full and new moon, spring tides result in both the highest high tides and lowest low tides. In contrast neap tides exert the least gravitation pull. Spring tides typically happen twice a month, but usually no more than once a month will spring low tides coincide with the heat of the midday sun.)

When growing in deeper waters, a keep-up species like mounding Porites spp. grow at rates of 5 to 25 mm per year and form dome shaped colonies. However due to increased aerial exposure when growth reaches the surface, or due to exposure from sea level fall, the upper most surface dies from high air temperatures, higher UV damage and desiccation. This results in a flat-topped colony leading to the classic “micro-atoll” shape, with dead coral in the center surrounded by a ring of live coral, as exemplified by a Kiribati micro-atoll in the photograph below.

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Micro-atoll patterns have been crucial for reconstructing past fluctuations in sea level on decadal to millennial timeframes. As Ampou 2017 observed in Bunaken NP, mortality due to a drop in sea level was mostly restricted to the upper 15 cm of coral, which leads to the formation of micro-atolls. So before simply assuming climate-change-warming has induced mortality, micro-atoll formation and other associated patterns indicative of sea level change must be examined. A short discussion on how sea level changes can shape micro-atolls can be read here.

Due to its regional sensitivity to the sea level change that accompanies an El Niño, the northern Great Barrier Reef has an abundance of fossil micro-atolls that have allowed researchers to estimate El Niño activity and fluctuating sea levels over the past 4000 years. They estimated 4000 years ago low water neap tides were at least 0.7 meters higher than they are at present. Studies of micro-atolls in the Cook Islands further to the east in the southern Pacific, suggest that by 1000 AD during the Medieval Warm Period, average sea level had fallen, but remained about 0.45 meters higher than today. During the Little Ice Age sea level fell to 0.2 meters below current levels during the late 1700s and early 1800s, before recovering throughout the 1900s.

Hughes 2017 wanted to emphasize GBR bleaching as a “global-scale event” in keeping with his greenhouse gas/global warming attribution, but bleaching and mortality was patchy on both local and regional scales. And although Hughes presented their analyses as “a fundamental shift away from viewing bleaching events as individual disturbances to reefs,” the unusually high mortality around Lizard Island demands a closer examination of individual reef disturbances. The lack of mortality in 2016 across the southern and Central GBR, was explained as a result of the cooling effects of tropical storm Winston, but that does not explain why individual reefs in those regions have not bleached at all, while others bleached only once, and still others bleached twice or three times since 1998. Hughes’ shift away from examining what factors affected individual reefs will most likely obscure the most critical factors and yield false attributions.

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Hughes reported the various proportions of areal bleaching as degrees of severity. But that frightened many in the public who confused bleaching with mortality, leading some misguided souls to blog the GBR was dead. However bleaching without mortality is not a worrisome event no matter how extensive. Rates of mortality and recovery are more important indices of reef health. As discussed in the article The Coral Bleaching Debate: Is Bleaching the Legacy of a Marvelous Adaptation Mechanism or A Prelude to Extirpation?, all coral retain greater densities of symbiotic algae (symbionts) in the winter but reduce that density in the summer, which often leads to minor seasonal bleaching episodes that are usually temporary. Under those circumstances coral typically return to normal within weeks or months. Furthermore by ejecting their current symbionts, coral can acquire new symbionts that can promote greater resilience to changing environmental conditions. Although symbiont shifting and shuffling promotes adaptation to shifting ocean temperatures, symbiont shuffling cannot protect against extreme low tide desiccation, and dead desiccated coral can no longer adapt. Humans have little control over El Niños or low tides.

Hughes also contradicted past studies to mistakenly suggesting that recurring bleaching in a given reef is evidence that corals are not adapting or acclimating. However bleaching happens for many reasons. Symbiont shuffling to better adapt to warmer waters does not guarantee adaptation to lower sea levels, cyclones or changes in salinity. Coral reefs deal with changing sea levels with rapid growth to keep-up as sea level rises, and then dying back when sea level falls. Decadal swings in regional sea level will likely cause decadal swings in bleaching and are not evidence of coral fragility.

Hughes 2017 modeled the 2016 GBR bleaching event as a function of surface ocean temperatures that surpass bleaching thresholds, although reefs will bleach below that threshold and will fail to bleach despite temperatures above that threshold. Despite the fact El Niños are well known to cause rapid sea level fall along the GBR, Hughes’ model never accounted for falling sea level. Nor did they account for past observations that falling sea levels induced bleaching when temperatures were below bleaching thresholds. More disturbing because sea level fall caused bleaching in various reefs, with some experiencing good water quality and others poor quality, Hughes asserted there was “no support for the hypothesis that good water quality confers resistance to bleaching.” However this contradicts an abundance of regional studies attributing increased coral disease and bleaching to high nutrient loading.

Woolridge 2013 have argued that coral eject their algal symbionts and bleach when temperature, light and nutrients increase to a level that accelerates the symbionts growth. Increased growth consequently reduces the amount of energy transferred to the coral, resulting in ejection of the slacking symbiont. Because increased nutrient loads can promote increased symbiont growth at relatively lower temperatures, higher nutrient loads can promote bleaching at lower temperatures.

Furthermore while coral’s symbiotic relationships allow them to recycle limited nutrients and out compete seaweeds, higher nutrient loads enable greater seaweed growth, which reduces corals’ competitive advantage. Furthermore seaweeds have been shown to harbor allelopathic chemicals that inhibit coral growth, as well as serving as reservoirs for bacteria that cause coral diseases. Higher nutrient loads induce more dissolved organic carbon that bacteria feed upon, allowing disease-causing bacteria to rapidly multiply. Higher nutrient loads also increase the survival of crown-of-thorns larvae, which then increases coral depredation and bleaching.

In a 2013 experimental study, Chronic Nutrient Enrichment Increases Prevalence And Severity Of Coral Disease And Bleaching, Vega-Thurber reported that higher nutrient loads caused a “twofold increase in both the prevalence and severity of disease compared with corals in unenriched control plots” as well as a “3.5-fold increase in bleaching frequency relative to control corals.”

Although Hughes 2017 suggests the pattern of recurring bleaching is simply a function of temperature and global warming, as illustrated in Hughes’ Figure “e” below, recurring bleaching is not a global phenomenon. (Black dots represent reefs that bleached during all 3 surveys: 1998, 2002, 2016; light gray represents reefs that bleached only once, and dark gray reefs bleached twice.) . In most cases the degree of recurring bleaching does not predict the recurrence of bleaching in nearby reefs despite similar ocean temperatures. Although an El Niño generates widespread bleaching, bleaching is still a regional issue affecting individual reefs differently. During an El Niño sea level rises in the eastern Pacific and falls in the western Pacific. Recurring bleaching in the Far North and Southern regions of the GBR are uncommon, while recurring GBR bleaching has been frequent between Cookstown and Townsville where temperatures have been quite variable. And in accord with prior research, the region between Cookstown and Townsville has suffered from lower water quality and higher nutrients loads, causing more frequent bleaching and greater crown-of-thorns attacks.

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After perusing Hughes 2017, it was clear they had been led to incorrectly embrace the prevailing bias of CO2-induced catastrophic bleaching because they failed to address the fall in sea level before and during the 2016 El Niño, and likewise they failed to address how weather created by El Niños promotes clear skies and increased solar heating. To add insult to injury, because sea level drops bleached reefs in both good water quality and bad, and bleaches reefs in both protected preserves and unprotected, Hughes 2017 presented a statistical argument that disparaged any significant value of ongoing conservation efforts to minimize bleaching by reducing nutrient loading and by protecting reefs from overfishing. By belittling or ignoring most critical factors affecting coral bleaching other than temperature, Hughes suggested our only recourse to protect reefs “ultimately requires urgent and rapid action to reduce global warming.”

And because such an apocryphal analysis was published in Nature and will undoubtedly mislead coral conservation policies,

I wept.

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Jim Steele is author of Landscapes & Cycles: An Environmentalist’s Journey to Climate Skepticism

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Stanley
April 5, 2017 7:05 am

Could the sea level fall also explain the reported mass die-off of coastal mangroves in the Gulf of Carpentaria? The warmists’ rush to invoke climate change (drought and warmer sea temperatures) did not seem to explain the phenomenon. Lack of sea water along a long coast seems more plausible than lack of run off from well spaced river mouths.

Reply to  Stanley
April 5, 2017 4:49 pm

“Could the sea level fall also explain the reported mass die-off of coastal mangroves … ”
Yes it could. I have personally inspected mangrove die-off that was most likely caused by a minor change in natural sedimentation around it.The people responsible for the area carefully washed and pumped the sediment away to higher ground, because they knew they would be blamed for the incident.
It is usually a natural process; mangroves retain sediment which eventually rises enough to become a dune and secondary colonising plants take over.
Mangroves don’t have the same media impact as coral. They are humming with life but are also a bubbling stinking mass of decay. They trap debris, act as nurseries for juvenile fish etc. Mangroves will actually walk, albeit very slowly. Could be moving with the sand bars maybe, but there is one in front of my place that has walked.

Tom Halla
April 5, 2017 7:14 am

Very interesting that changes in sea level are a well known effect of ENSO, but the “researchers” did not take it into account. I guess they will claim it was the CO2 in the open air that killed the coral.

MarkW
Reply to  Tom Halla
April 5, 2017 9:20 am

We’ve been told that CO2 is so powerful that it completely swamps all other natural causes.
So why bother investigating anything other than CO2?

troe
April 5, 2017 7:15 am

The Man Of Steele produces work that educates. What more should anyone ask of a scientist and teacher.

As to the corals let me suggest that we find one that is particularly resilient and designate it a Shakhanovite Coral. We can then roll out a comprehensive propaganda effort exhorting all corals to follow it’s example. This would
have the same effect as public policy based on much of current climate science.

Editor
April 5, 2017 7:50 am

The Hughes paper is only the latest in a long series of catastrophic reports on the GBR from the same group of researchers at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies. This outfit represents the “endless doom” side of the Great Barrier Reef Wars in Australian reef science.

Both the Australian Institute of Marine Science and the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority have since issued statements attempting to correct Hughes et al. 2017. By the end of summer we will see new papers modifying the outlook towards something more real — and by next year, papers showing the magnificent resilience of the GBR to recover from this latest bleaching event.

Oddly, as the reef recovers, no one will mention that CO2 concentrations did not have to fall for this to occur.

Greg
Reply to  Kip Hansen
April 5, 2017 9:04 am

” the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies”

Yet another of these bullshit “Centres of Excellence”. Who are they trying to con ? If you were a centre of excellence you would not need to put it on the letter head. Do Yale and Harvard have to put “excellence” in their names? No, because they ARE centres of excellence not bullshit merchants trying to dress politics as science.

Reply to  Greg
April 6, 2017 5:16 am

A while back I taped over the sign on the washroom in my academic department with the label “Center for Sanitation Excellence.” I expected it to spark outrage and be removed right away, but it drew giggles and survived a couple of years. Apparently no one takes this marketing BS seriously.

Beliaik
Reply to  Kip Hansen
April 5, 2017 4:47 pm

Kip

Recently James Cook University’s “ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies” (JCU-ARCCECRS) and the Reef and Rainforest Research Centre (RRRC) went public with a bid for millions of taxpayer dollars to set up large-scale pumping stations to pump cold water up onto the reef flat.

It was so intensely annoying that I started a change.org petition to get them stopped. After two weeks it has 375 signatures. https://www.change.org/p/steven-miles-save-the-great-barrier-reef-from-industrial-scale-experiments

I’ll paste in the petition’s body text below. I just wish I’d had read Jim’s essay before I wrote it…

Cheers, Beliaik
FNQ

Should people who don’t properly understand the Great Barrier Reef be allowed to interfere with it on a massive scale?

Sign this petition to stop industrial-scale experimentation on the reef! Say no to electric currents! Say no to giant plastic shade cloths! Say no to genetically engineered “Frankencoral”! Say no to cold-water pumping!

James Cook University’s “ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies” (JCU-ARCCECRS) and the Reef and Rainforest Research Centre (RRRC) have bombarded us with stories of impending reef death for years. They are motivated to do so because their livelihoods depend on them finding the next scary story.

None of their prophecies of doom have come true and it is fairly clear that they don’t have a full and meaningful understanding of their subject.

Revelations from scientists elsewhere (such as coral’s kissing behaviour, the healthy coral reef under the Amazon mud-plume and the effects of oxybenzone from sunscreen) always come as a surprise to JCU-ARCCECRS and RRRC.

JCU-ARCCECRS and RRRC love to link coral bleaching to the carbon dioxide emissions from humans burning coal – but they have never provided empirical evidence to support their “belief”.

On March 22, 2017, they said they want to pump cold water from the depths into the naturally warm coral reef environment.

They must be stopped because they can’t be trusted to get it right. It is highly possible they will do more harm than good.

JCU-ARCCECRS and RRRC don’t seem to look for other sources of heat that may have warmed the waters of the Coral Sea other than the alleged CO2 greenhouse effect.

JCU-ARCCECRS and RRRC don’t discuss the influence of the recent El Nino event on Coral Sea water temperatures – El Nino is an entirely natural cycle with no connection to humans burning fossil fuels.

The bleached areas of the GBR are bathed by the South Equatorial Current, which is heated by sea-floor volcanicity in the Vanuatu-Solomons region – where some of the world’s most active and spectacular volcanoes are found. But JCU-ARCCECRS and RRRC don’t monitor heat from that source.

The Vanuatu-Solomons volcanic zone has many sea-floor hydrothermal vents that release sulphur compounds that are toxic to the microorganisms that are the basis of the reef’s food chain; but JCU-ARCCECRS and RRRC don’t monitor those compounds’ effects on coral.

Oxybenzone, an ingredient in many sunscreens worn by reef researchers and tourists alike, is highly toxic to coral, even in minute quantities. But JCU-ARCCECRS and RRRC don’t study that either.

Coral is the ultimate survivor from the past 400 million years of ever-changing climate and multiple mass-extinction events, but JCU-ARCCECRS and RRRC don’t explain why it should suddenly be hyper-sensitive to minor water temperature changes.

The ability of coral to expel and replace symbionts is an evolutionary superpower that other species can only dream of, but JCU-ARCCECRS and RRRC never discuss that.

JCU-ARCCECRS and RRRC don’t mention that coral can live in waters much hotter than ours, such as the Middle-East, and much colder as well, like New Zealand.

JCU-ARCCECRS and RRRC don’t explain how coral seems to be OK in blazing hot sun at low tide, either in shallow, easily-heated pools or exposed to the air. Nor how the same species will grow in slightly deeper water where it’s colder.

JCU-ARCCECRS and RRRC are always punishing farmers over terrestrial sediments but they were as surprised as anybody when it was discovered there was a healthy coral reef living happily under the permanent mud-plume of the Amazon River.

JCU-ARCCECRS and RRRC have taken to flying over the reef to determine the extent of coral “mortality” – but they should know that when coral expels it’s symbionts it’s flesh becomes transparent and only a close examination will determine whether it is alive or dead.

JCU-ARCCECRS and RRRC can’t explain how the man-made carbon dioxide molecules reflecting infrared radiation back down to the sea are able to heat the molecule-thick surface layer of the water without evaporation immediately re-releasing that heat energy to the air. They seem unaware that infrared radiation cannot penetrate water.

JCU-ARCCECRS and RRRC promote scandalously weak claims as if they were somehow supported by empirical evidence and were to be accepted as fact – to the extent that they want $9 million taxpayer dollars to pump cold water onto the reef.

Steven Miles, please pour cold water on these scientists. We say “no” to industrial-scale interference with our Reef!

https://www.change.org/p/steven-miles-save-the-great-barrier-reef-from-industrial-scale-experiments

Editor
Reply to  Beliaik
April 5, 2017 5:44 pm

Beliak ==> There is some information here on the CoTS problem.

Beliaik
Reply to  Beliaik
April 5, 2017 6:13 pm

Kip

GBRMPA has rearranged its website and broken your link to the COTS research. Searching COTS there gives 700 results. Which article did you mean?

GBRMPA isn’t at all trusted by Far North Queenslanders. They’re just another bunch of kool-aid-drinking, government-funded zealots.

Thanks, Beliaik

Editor
Reply to  Beliaik
April 5, 2017 8:37 pm

Beliak ==> There is some information Try this link

April 5, 2017 7:57 am

It’s very difficult to prove to the general public that CO2 isn’t causing warming, but it’s much easier to show that reefs aren’t dying from “global warming.” For example, see here http://www.icriforum.org/caribbeanreport. Organizations that monitor reef health know what the real and immediate threats to reefs are, and it isn’t global warming. It’s pollution and overfishing.

I find that when I talk to people about CO2 they’re easily lost when I get into even a little bit of the science; they have no idea if I know what I’m talking about or if I’m blowing smoke. When I talk about reefs, though, I can explain pretty easily that reef deaths aren’t due to global warming, and I have the “authority” of reef organizations to back me up. That authority is important.

Something to think about, in light of the recent post about “winning the war” on climate science. Maybe we should be talking about reefs first.

Doug
April 5, 2017 7:59 am

Didn’t the crown of thorns starfish doom the entire reef in the 1960’s ? At least that is what we were taught in school. Must be resilient or something.

Editor
Reply to  Doug
April 5, 2017 9:12 am

Doug ==> Crown of Thorns “outbreaks” are still serious threats on the reefs of Australia. There are efforts to control them in areas of serious outbreak.

Beliaik
Reply to  Kip Hansen
April 5, 2017 4:55 pm

Kip

Females COTS produce 120 million offspring per season each. That suggests COTS have evolved to counter heavy juvenile losses due to predation or some other factor. Shouldn’t researchers be trying to find out where all those unsuccessful juveniles disappear to? Perhaps restoring numbers of a suitable predator would solve the COTS problem.

Cheers, Beliaik
FNQ

Glenn
Reply to  Kip Hansen
April 6, 2017 6:38 am

Vinegar?? Why is that better than pumping cold water in?

Stop the runoff, don’t add to it.

https://www.qld.gov.au/environment/agriculture/sustainable-farming/canefarming-impacts/

Editor
Reply to  Kip Hansen
April 6, 2017 8:13 am

Glenn ==> The vinegar is not added to the sea water to control CoTS….it is injected into individual CoTS by a diver — killing that one starfish within 48 hours, but not making the [dead] starfish body poisonous to other reef inhabitants that then eat the dead starfish. see https://www.jcu.edu.au/news/releases/2015/september/new-weapon-against-the-reef-eaters.

Horace Jason Oxboggle
Reply to  Kip Hansen
April 6, 2017 2:32 pm

My theory is that bleaching on the Great Barrier Reef is caused by the mating of Crown of Thorns Starfish with cane toads. Hell, it’s as plausible as some others!

Editor
Reply to  Kip Hansen
April 7, 2017 8:50 am

Ya never know…..

Greg
April 5, 2017 9:14 am

Very good article Jim but way too long. My attention deficiency syndrome kicked in about half way down.

One thing to note about tidal forces: in both 1998 and 2016 the perigee full moon fell within a few days of the vernal equinox and an eclipse event. This means perfect alignment of sun and moon over the equator with the moon at its closest point and thus maximum tide raising forces.

Be careful with altimetry data, many datasets include in ‘inverse barometer correction’ which in the case of high pressure system over the region would artificially bring the pretend water level back up.

toorightmate
Reply to  Greg
April 5, 2017 9:35 pm

Greg,
Your attention span is your problem, not Jims.

Annie
Reply to  toorightmate
April 8, 2017 11:30 pm

I thought it a great article and had no problem with length. OH’s interruptions caused more trouble!

Roger Knights
Reply to  Greg
April 6, 2017 1:20 am

I agree that it could have been more concise if there had been less repetition.
(Excellent otherwise.)

troe
April 5, 2017 9:52 am

What is the point of having a Liberal government in Austrailia or a Republican one in the USA if they pursue bad policy based on lousy science. Does Mr. Turnbull have an answer? We found ours last go round. Best Wishes to our Aussie friends.

April 5, 2017 11:18 am

Reblogged this on Wolsten and commented:
An excellent analysis of Hughes 2017. Probably not surprising that the impact of falling sea levels was ignored when the prevailing dogma has them rising inexorably.

April 5, 2017 1:02 pm

SPS corals which make up most of the corals you see in these bleach images are very sensitive to light spectrum changes and falling sea level would cause such a problem which the corals naturally adjust to.

April 5, 2017 1:18 pm

Should not all people responsible for approving grants for “scientific research” have to show that they understand that “correlation does not prove causation”?

James at 48
April 5, 2017 1:35 pm

Doesn’t El Nino also lower the SSTs in that area?

wpdelange
April 5, 2017 1:39 pm

One of my MSc students undertook a research project a decade ago looking at managing the coral reef fish resources for the Federated States of Micronesia. One of the local concerns was about the impacts of global warming on the coral reefs. The focus was on bleaching due to elevated temperatures, particularly following a severe event in 1998. We compiled all available data for Pohnpei on ocean and atmospheric conditions and bleaching events.
The students analysis showed that severe bleaching coincided with a shift in dominant wind direction with an associated change in wave patterns, a drop in sea surface and air temperatures, a decrease in rainfall and a large decrease in sea level (30 cm below MSL). Our conclusion was that the bleaching was primarily due to sea level fall exposing the upper reef to the atmosphere and UV. It was not a well received conclusion.

Col
April 5, 2017 2:06 pm

A thought for Jim Steele to follow; The Australian tectonic plate is moving towards New Guinea at around 24mm per year and has been doing so since it broke away from Antarctica. As it does so, it is rising against the northern plate so that the Torres Strait is one of the shallowest seaways in the world. This movement could cause the sea levels to fall the further north you go. If you look at the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority colour coded chart, this seems to be represented with most bleaching to the north and least to the south.
It would be interesting to see if the sea levels at the various monitoring stations reflect this.

Gloateus
Reply to  Col
April 5, 2017 3:06 pm

As you know, technically southern New Guinea is on the Australian Plate. This big, continental plate meets a bunch of little plates in northern New Guinea, forming the Highlands, and the Bismarck arc, site of some big, active volcanoes.

Curious George
April 5, 2017 2:47 pm

“It is puzzling why the recent 2017 publication in Nature, Global Warming And Recurrent Mass Bleaching Of Corals by Hughes et al. ignored the most critical factor affecting the 2016 severe bleaching along the northern Great Barrier Reef – the regional fall in sea level ..” Not puzzling at all. The SEA LEVEL RISE is the sacred cow of alarmism. The FALL, even a regional one, is extremely inconvenient.

April 5, 2017 3:54 pm

I weep with you, the overwhelming incompetence of virtually every “scientist” ??? involved in promoting AGW routinely stuns me. Thank you for your most insightful article on corals

Peter Ridd
April 5, 2017 4:20 pm

Jim,
you may be interested that there was a mass mortality of mangroves in the Gulf of Carpentaria last year also caused in part by a temporary drop in sea level associated with El Nino. It was a huge event. see link below or I can send you the original paper.
I should add that I have looked at many of the videos of the bleaching taken from aircraft and it is difficult to see how the figures that Hughes presents are credible. In addition a parallel survey of GBR bleaching done by tourist operators indicated far lower levels than reported by Hughes team.
It looks like another example of results we cannot trust.
Peter Ridd
James Cook University
http://theconversation.com/extreme-weather-likely-behind-worst-recorded-mangrove-dieback-in-northern-australia-71880?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Impact%20Report%20for%20James%20Cook%20University%20March%202017&utm_content=Impact%20Report%20for%20James%20Cook%20University%20March%202017+CID_b3384aca5cce1101a5c5d3a9194f88ce&utm_source=campaign_monitor&utm_term=Extreme%20weather%20likely%20behind%20worst%20recorded%20mangrove%20dieback%20in%20northern%20Australia

Reply to  Peter Ridd
April 6, 2017 8:51 am

Hi Peter,

The effect of lower sea level on mangroves is definitely interesting. If you could send me the original paper I would be grateful. jsteele@sfsu.edu. Thanks

Can you publishing/blog a comparison of Hghes’ estimates to the others?

John Gorter
April 5, 2017 5:41 pm

Great article Jim.

Ciao

John

alfredmelbourne
April 5, 2017 6:10 pm

Just bought his book. People who can think critically need to be encouraged IMHO.

DaveR
April 5, 2017 6:20 pm

Its always refreshing to see a scientific article which looks at the data first, and then makes hypotheses second. There is not a lot of that approach in the climate fraternity. It even more refreshing when that study explodes a dogma well past its use-by date.

On a scientific point, a 120m sea level rise in the last 20ky after the last ice age peak means that all current corals down to 120m didnt exist 20k years ago, and the shallower colonies are very young.

I have a feeling that corals dog the current sea level and live/die as MSL moves. Isotopic age studies on corals must be particularly illuminating.

JohnKnight
April 5, 2017 8:01 pm

Oh my goodness . . this is like a WMD . . Yer a real badass Mr. Steele ; )

Peter s
April 5, 2017 9:11 pm

I have snorkeled out there twice and it is breathtaking as you dive down deeper. The GBR is a living thing. In ideal conditions the coral grows wider and higher until it gets close to the surface where it is exposed to the sun more often during low tide. Naturally its vivid colours will become bleached. But of course there is no funding in this sort of story.

Bill Parsons
April 5, 2017 11:11 pm

Have there been studies of coral exposure on the eastern pacific coastal areas (Baja, or wherever coral is found)? My understanding is the ocean sloshes back the other way after an El Nino – some say as much as 9″ decline. So…

Do La Nina periods leave corals along the western Americas exposed? If so, perhaps there is complementary bleaching in opposition to the bleaching in the western pacific.

Anyway, thanks Jim Steele for another intriguing science piece. Seems like a strong case to explain surface bleaching.

Bill Parsons
April 5, 2017 11:40 pm

http://www.news.gatech.edu/2015/02/23/la-ni%C3%B1a-conditions-associated-2500-year-long-shutdown-coral-reef-growth

Photo Caption:
An exposed coral reef in Panamá. Exposures during La Niña events, such as this one in 2010, kill the corals en masse. Frequent La Niña-like events helped drive a long-term collapse of reef ecosystems across the Pacific, which began around 4000 years ago and lasted 2500 years.

April 6, 2017 5:04 am

So sea level rise is levelling off and the Climagesterium is trying to conceal the fact.
This could get interesting.