Coral Recoveries and Growth Show The Hill Is Misleading About Global Warming Killing Reefs

From ClimateREALISM

By Linnea Lueken

A recent article in The Hill, “Climate change is not a ‘con job’,” claims that catastrophic, human-caused climate change is killing reefs via ocean heatwaves. This claim is false. In reality, corals have existed for millions of years, through warmer and colder periods, and in the recent past, coral reefs have recovered from bleaching events and even die-offs, proving to species to be adaptive and resilient in the face of climate change.

The Hill article, from Rebecca Vega Thurber, the director of the UC Santa Barbara Marine Science Institute, is framed by Thurber’s annoyance that President Donald Trump says climate change is a “con job.” She claims her personal research experience refutes his comment.

Thurber explains that pollution from fertilizer runoff can kill corals, which is true, but goes on to assert that “every result we have collected, in every one of these well intentioned and carefully designed experiments, was waylaid by the increasingly frequent and severe heat waves that have arisen in the last decades.” She says their efforts to mitigate pollution were “overwhelmed by high water temperatures driven by climate change or worse, climate change killed our whole experiment.”

Thurber claims marine heatwaves in the French South Pacific hampered her work by “transform[ing] these normally bountiful reefs from habitats where there was once 60 percent of the seafloor covered with healthy corals to barren plains with less than 1 percent live coral.”

In point of fact, one long-term study from 2019 showed that rather than a “barren plain” French Polynesian reefs have an “outstanding rate of coral recovery, with a systematic return to pre-disturbance state within only 5 to 10 years.”

A second study from 2024, published in Nature, sought to understand why reefs bounced back so readily after major heat waves, concluding that:

Over the past three decades, there have been five main warming events that have caused mass bleaching around Moorea and Tahiti, in 1994, 2002, 2007, 2016, and 2019. Despite bleaching levels up to 100% for some coral species, reefs experienced as high as ~76% recovery following each event.

It is currently unknown what controls the ability of coral coverage to recover quickly at these locations. It has been suggested that reefs may develop an increased tolerance to higher SSTs following each bleaching event, and that the increased resilience would allow for a shorter recovery period with less die-off under subsequent SST extremes.

In short, the scientific literature does not support Thurber’s contention in The Hill that coral reefs are dying off in vast numbers. Interestingly, just a few years ago The Hill published an article with a different tone, discussing the fact that coral reefs were thriving “despite warming seas,” but the outlet seems to have forgotten this.

What Thurber and The Hill also neglected to mention was that recent mass die offs did not just coincide with heatwaves alone. Rather a spate of tropical cyclones and crown of thorns starfish outbreaks occurred over the same period resulting in multiple coral colony declines. Multiple stressors are harder on a species than any of those dangers would be alone.

Thurber mentions that Australian reefs are another part of her area of research, but she does not mention that 2024 was the third year in a row where the Great Barrier Reef had record breaking coral coverage.

Unfortunately, close study of reef die backs barely existed in the early parts of the 20th century and before, so short term records like single-event tied die-offs do not stretch into the pre-industrial period for comparison. As a result it is all too easy for alarmists to assert, for example, that marine heatwaves are unprecedented when there are only a few decades of satellite data to work from. Longer term studies, and a knowledge of how coral reefs around the world are built over time, show, in fact, that coral death is part of the reef construction process.

Coral reefs have survived much hotter periods than today, like the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum which was 5-8°C hotter, as well as much colder glacial periods. One reason for this is that coral organisms are not immobile. Even if particular regions became too hot, which is highly unlikely in our lifetimes, corals could just migrate poleward, as research suggests they did in the past. Change like that might be uncomfortable for narrowly-focused researchers, but it is part of the Earth’s history.

The Hill did a disservice to its readers by publishing this article which served no other purpose than was to frighten readers into ignoring Trump’s important point, that bad actors (particularly at the United Nations, where he made the comments) are using climate alarm to promote harmful leftist-favoring policies and enrich themselves. I am sure that Thurber is a “true believer” in the catastrophic warming narrative, but it does not help her case when essential facts are left out of the argument and when the multiple sources of data that do exist contradict her claims.

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October 17, 2025 2:13 pm

Climate change is a con.

Thurber is s dunce. Or a zealot. Or both.

Any marine biologist who actually studied coral knows they’ve been around for hundreds of millions of years, through periods with 5 to 10 times at much CO2 and much hotter temperatures. And they know that coral reefs frequently bleach in response to local environmental stress, like shallow, unusually warm water; ejecting their polyps so they can recolonize in better conditions. And they know that often warm shallow waters are temporary and when the warm cycle reverts to a cooler cycle, the coral returns and thrives. The Great Barrier Reef is the poster child for this bust and boom cycle due to the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO).

Scissor
Reply to  stinkerp
October 17, 2025 3:23 pm

The Michigan state stone (Petoskey stone) is a fossil of Hexagonaria percarinata coral that lived 350 million years ago. Apparently that species of coral is extinct. I wonder why. Not my fault in any case.

They say the formation of the Pangea supercontinent destroyed the marine environments where these corals lived.

October 17, 2025 2:17 pm

Absolutely climate alarmism is a con job. Absolutely the perpetrators seek to alarm, to generate fear, to scare. Their motivations are rent seeking or worse, authoritarian power. It’s sad, really. They make themselves into the enemy of free people.

John Hultquist
October 17, 2025 2:40 pm

Ocean surface water temperatures vary. Who knew?!

Scissor
Reply to  John Hultquist
October 17, 2025 3:37 pm

It was so nice in Texas this past week. I walked on the beach morning and night. It almost made me forget how miserable the heat and humidity are there in the summertime.

October 17, 2025 2:56 pm

Global warming is an atmospheric phenomenon. CO2 does not warm ocean water, the sun does.

Anyone who talks about global warming in the ocean needs a theory to base it on and it just doesn’t exist.

Clive Bond
Reply to  doonman
October 17, 2025 9:17 pm

Your right doonman,sunlight, short wave radiation, penetrates water down to 100 mtrs. The air in contact with the water, long wave radiation does not penetrate water it just heats the top couple of mm which causes evaporation.

Reply to  Clive Bond
October 18, 2025 5:17 am

Not millimeters, but *microns* (thousandths OF *one* millimeter).

Mr.
October 17, 2025 4:50 pm

I’d like to request a study that explains the impressive recovery of the Bikini Atoll coral reefs to their pre atomic bomb testing obliteration in just 60 years.

You want to talk about bleaching?
Hold my beer . . .

DD More
Reply to  Mr.
October 18, 2025 9:22 pm

Repeat of a 2014 post, answering your request.

I believe coral may be a little tougher and these worries are idiotic.
 From http://www.bikiniatoll.com/BIKINICORALS.pdf 

In the northern atolls of the Marshall Islands, 23 nuclear tests with a total yield of 76.3 megatons (TNT equivalent) were conducted across seven test sites located either on the reef, on the sea, in the air and underwater between 1946 and 1958. Five craters were created, the deepest being the Bravo crater at 73 m depth (Noshkin et al., 1997a) (Figs. 2, 3). Post-test descriptions of environmental impacts include: surface seawater temperatures raised by 55,000 C after air-borne tests; blast waves with speeds of up to 8 m/s; and shock and surface waves up to 30 m high with blast columns reaching the floor of the lagoon (approximately 70 m depth)
 

The results of our 12 year long nuclear war on coral. After less than 50 years, a total of 183 scleractinian coral species were recorded, compared to 126 species recorded in the pre-bomb study.

There are more species now than then.

Mr.
Reply to  DD More
October 19, 2025 8:03 pm

Spot on!

October 17, 2025 9:01 pm

Linnea, I have read your submissions before and had nothing to complain about. However, this one presented me with a couple of grammatical errors, at which point I stopped reading. Usually, MS Word will catch simple errors such as subject and verb agreement, or missing words. If you don’t use MS Word you should. And it doesn’t hurt to ask a colleague to review your writings.

edphinney
Reply to  Clyde Spencer
October 17, 2025 9:58 pm

I read it twice, looking for such errors, but found none. Perhaps my skill from copyediting for newspapers and academic writing is not comparable to that of MS Word. I enjoyed the article.

observa
October 17, 2025 9:32 pm

Warning! COP30 coming….COP30 coming..
The Great Barrier Reef is facing ‘catastrophic’ risks – don’t despair
No ‘new normal’: Al Gore warning on climate complacency

In a delicious irony AI is going to make for a lot more work with environmental impact statements and the overall process-
Queensland anti-renewables group cited nonexistent papers in inquiry submissions using AI, publisher says
The democratisation of being objectionable will cut both ways and become problematic for the fact checkers. You used AI..we cry foul!… no you did…yada yada…

observa
Reply to  observa
October 17, 2025 9:47 pm

PS: More solar panels and windmills will be required folks-
Australia’s wet tropics no longer drawing down carbon
Preferably in space if the pesky deplorables are using AI to object locally plus they’re wearing out-
Space-based solar power emerging as alternative as other solar projects shut down | Watch

Reply to  observa
October 18, 2025 5:21 am

I know you’re being sarcastic, but for the benefit of lurkers that may misunderstand, NO solar panels or windmills were EVER “needed.”

abolition man
October 17, 2025 10:38 pm

The purveyors of Catastrophic Anthropogenic Climate Activism (CACA) should be required to heat their bath water with a blow dryer! This should prove once and for all how easily CO2 warms the oceans to the boiling point as claimed by some corrupt bureaucrat; the UN Sec General I think, but I repeat myself!
I suppose blow dryers will have to come with a warning label for libtards everywhere, but especially the brainwashed masses of Commifornia: DO NOT use while immersed in the tub, lest you attain the Marxist Utopia naked!

Phillip Bratby
October 17, 2025 10:54 pm

It would seem that the number one prerequisite to be a climate alarmist is the ability to lie.

observa
October 18, 2025 2:36 am

Peter Ridd having a chuckle at the climate changers panicking-
Far-left Australian Senate climate inquiry shoots itself in the foot.

Allchemistry
October 18, 2025 8:48 am

Coral is a marine biofilm of microorganisms living on a self-formed mineral matrix, where symbiotic microbes interact, grow, and sometimes disperse, forming a dynamic, living surface. It is known that symbionts in biofilms can “sense” when the biofilm becomes too dense (quorum sensing). They then detach from the surface and swarm out to colonize new surfaces. The swarming of the colored (photosynthetic) microorganisms in particular is what causes the coral to appear bleached. In fact, this is a completely natural process, comparable to the ripening of grain. Therefore, conditions that promote “ripening,” such as slightly elevated seawater temperatures (El Niño) or the pollution from fertilizer run-off, will lead to coral bleaching. After the symbionts have swarmed out, the biofilm grows again, and a new cycle starts.

Peter Rees
October 19, 2025 8:10 am

“Bleaching” is a normal process that should be called “algae ejection” because that what happens when there is a sustained temperature change, hot or cold, on coral. After algae has been ejected, the coral loses colour but can survive for up to 2 months before a new algae more suitable for the changed temperature is taken in and colour returns.

there are 3000 reefs in the Great Barrier Reef and not one of them has ever died. The most damage occurs from crown of stars starfish and storms/cyclones which break off chunks of coral which eventually get broken down into sediment.

but this is a vital process needed to ensure coral atolls keep pace with sea level change. A study by university of Auckland researchers found that 84% of pacific atolls studied had either grown or remained static over 30 years or so.

charles Darwin first noticed this phenomenon