Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

New USGS study suggests that high-latitude environments are unlikely to support coral reef growth as the climate warms

Researcher Lauren T. Toth (Research Physical Scientist) of the St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center (SPCMSC) led a study published this week in Nature Scientific Reports that reconstructed the impact of long-term climate variability on the latitudinal extent of reef-building in south Florida to evaluate the prospects of northern expansion of reef development in a future, warmer world.

Fish swim among pointed coral stems
The reef-building staghorn coral, Acropora cervicornis, has recently expanded its range to the nearshore environments of southeast Florida, offshore of Broward County, as the climate has warmed. Its prospects for building reefs that far north will be severely limited by cold fronts, which climate change is making more common. (Courtesy of William F. Precht, Dial Cordy & Associates, Inc.)

The complex, three-dimensional structures built by coral reefs over thousands of years provide the foundation that supports critical “ecosystem services” for people living on reef-lined coasts including shoreline protection and habitat for fisheries species. Reef development has historically been limited in subtropical, high-latitude coral-reef habitats like those in South Florida because minimum temperatures hover just above the lower threshold for coral growth. However, recent range expansions of thermally sensitive, reef-building corals into these marginal environments as the climate has warmed have led to the hypothesis that subtropical habitats may serve as a refuge for coral reefs from high-temperature extremes in the future. Toth, along with SPCMSC Physical Scientist Anastasios Stathakopoulos and academic collaborators, tested this hypothesis by analyzing an extensive dataset of Holocene-age corals collected in coastal habitats from Miami to Palm Beach, FL (referred to as South Florida here). They showed that the relatively warm, stable climate ~10,000 to 8,000 years ago allowed reefs to expand their ranges poleward. Subsequent cooling drove the progressive contraction of the reefs to the south, and by 3,000 years ago reef-building had ceased throughout South Florida. The study suggests that modern climate change will not simply reverse this trend. Instead, by increasing the frequency of extreme weather events, including both intense warm and cold fronts, climate change will exaggerate the already-hostile environmental conditions in thermally marginal environments like South Florida, preventing reef-building from resuming in the future. 

 

Read what else is new at the St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center.

 

Get Our News

These items are in the RSS feed format (Really Simple Syndication) based on categories such as topics, locations, and more. You can install and RSS reader browser extension, software, or use a third-party service to receive immediate news updates depending on the feed that you have added. If you click the feed links below, they may look strange because they are simply XML code. An RSS reader can easily read this code and push out a notification to you when something new is posted to our site.