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Dear EarthTalk: I’ve heard about
the die-off of coral reefs due to global
warming. I’ve also read that coral
reefs themselves store carbon dioxide (CO2),
one of the main global warming gases. So
if coral reefs are dying out, isn’t
that a double whammy that increases the CO2
in the atmosphere?
--
Tom Ozzello, Maplewood, MN
According
to marine scientists, the world’s coral
reefs–those underwater repositories for
biodiversity that play host to some 25 percent
of all marine life–are in big trouble
as a result of global warming. Data collected
by the international environmental group WWF
(formerly World Wildlife Fund) show that 20
percent of the world’s coral reefs have
been effectively destroyed and show no immediate
sign of recovery, while about 50 percent of
remaining reefs are under imminent or long-term
threat of collapse.
Most scientists now agree that global warming
is not a natural phenomenon but a direct result
of the continual release of excessive amounts
of CO2 and other "greenhouse" gases
into the atmosphere by human industrial and
transportation activity. And the small but
prolonged rises in ocean temperature that result
cause coral colonies to expel the symbiotic
food-producing algae that sustain them. This
process is called "bleaching," because
it turns the reefs white as they die.
But researchers working with the Coral Reef
Alliance have found that while coral reefs
do store CO2 as part of photosynthesis, they
tend to release most of it back into the ocean
(so they are not what are known as "carbon
sinks"). As such, the release of CO2 from
dying coral reefs is not a major concern.
Of course, the ocean itself is a large carbon
sink, storing about a quarter of what would
otherwise end up in the atmosphere. Landmasses
(and their plants) soak up another quarter
of all the CO2 emanating from the Earth’s
surface, while the rest rises up into the atmosphere
where it can wreak havoc with our climate.
Recent findings indicate that the Antarctic
Ocean is getting less efficient at storing
CO2, and this raises serious questions about
the ability of our oceans to handle everything
we throw at them. The study’s authors
fear that "such weakening of one of the
Earth’s major carbon dioxide sinks will
lead to higher levels of atmospheric carbon
dioxide in the long-term."
Not everyone is forecasting gloom and doom.
Some Australian researchers believe that coral
reefs around the world could expand in size
by up to a third due to increased ocean warming. "Our
finding stands in stark contrast to previous
predictions that coral reef growth will suffer
large, potentially catastrophic, decreases
in the future," says University of New
South Wales oceanographer Ben McNeil, who led
the controversial 2004 study that was published
in the peer-reviewed scientific journal, Geophysical
Research Letters. "Our analysis suggests
that ocean warming will foster considerably
faster future rates of coral reef growth that
will eventually exceed pre-industrial rates
by as much as 35 per cent by 2100," he
adds.
In spite of such theories, the majority of
marine scientists remain pessimistic about
the future of coral reefs in a warmer world.
One can only hope that the optimists are right.
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