Study shows cleaner water mitigates climate change effects on Florida Keys coral reefs

Improving the quality of local water increases the resistance of coral reefs to global climate change, according to a study published in June in Marine Ecology Progress Series. Florida Institute of Technology coral reef ecologist Robert van Woesik and his student Dan Wagner led the study, which provides concrete evidence for a link between environmental health and the prospects for reefs in a rapidly changing world.

Van Woesik and his team showed that when waters in the Florida Keys warmed over the last few summers, corals living in cleaner water with fewer did well. On the other hand, corals in dirtier water became sick and bleached.

"Regulating wastewater discharge from the land will help resist climate change," said van Woesik. "In the face of climate change and ocean warming, this study gives managers hope that maintaining high water quality can spare corals."

More information: The link to the published paper is at www.int-res.com/abstracts/meps/v408/p65-78

Citation: Study shows cleaner water mitigates climate change effects on Florida Keys coral reefs (2010, July 6) retrieved 29 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2010-07-cleaner-mitigates-climate-effects-florida.html
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