Climate change scenarios suggest an increase in tropical ocean temperature by 1–3uC by 2099, potentially killing many coral reefs. But Arabian/Persian Gulf corals already exist in this future thermal environment predicted for most tropical reefs and survived severe bleaching in 2010, one of the hottest years on record. Exposure to 33–35uC was on average twice as long as in non-bleaching years. Gulf corals bleached after exposure to temperatures above 34uC for a total of 8 weeks of which 3 weeks were above 35uC. This is more heat than any other corals can survive, providing an insight into the present limits of holobiont adaptation. We show that average temperatures as well as heat-waves in the Gulf have been increasing, that coral populatio...
Coral Reefs are rapidly deteriorating in response to an onslaught of human-mediated stressors. Just ...
Aim: Predictions for the future of coral reefs are largely based on thermal exposure and poorly acco...
Coral reefs are threatened by climate change as coral-algal symbioses are currently living close to ...
Climate change scenarios suggest an increase in tropical ocean temperature by 1-3°C by 2099, potenti...
Climate change scenarios suggest an increase in tropical ocean temperature by 1–3°C by 2099, potenti...
Climate change scenarios suggest an increase in tropical ocean temperature by 1–3uC by 2099, potenti...
Increasing seawater temperatures are being measured worldwide, causing coral bleaching events during...
Sea temperatures in many tropical regions have increased by almost 1 degrees C over the past 100 yea...
The corals of the Persian/Arabian Gulf are better adapted to temperature fluctuations than elsewhere...
The future survival of coral reefs depends on the envelope of critical climatic conditions determini...
The potential of reef-building corals to adapt to increasing sea-surface temperatures is often debat...
Coral reefs are among the most threatened ecosystem, partly due to the sustained and ongoing effects...
Corals in the Gulf withstand summer temperatures up to 10 °C higher than corals elsewhere and have ...
Coral reefs, one of the world’s most ecologically and socioeconomically important ecosystems, are in...
The findings in this paper show that Arabian Gulf (Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Sharjah) corals have already be...
Coral Reefs are rapidly deteriorating in response to an onslaught of human-mediated stressors. Just ...
Aim: Predictions for the future of coral reefs are largely based on thermal exposure and poorly acco...
Coral reefs are threatened by climate change as coral-algal symbioses are currently living close to ...
Climate change scenarios suggest an increase in tropical ocean temperature by 1-3°C by 2099, potenti...
Climate change scenarios suggest an increase in tropical ocean temperature by 1–3°C by 2099, potenti...
Climate change scenarios suggest an increase in tropical ocean temperature by 1–3uC by 2099, potenti...
Increasing seawater temperatures are being measured worldwide, causing coral bleaching events during...
Sea temperatures in many tropical regions have increased by almost 1 degrees C over the past 100 yea...
The corals of the Persian/Arabian Gulf are better adapted to temperature fluctuations than elsewhere...
The future survival of coral reefs depends on the envelope of critical climatic conditions determini...
The potential of reef-building corals to adapt to increasing sea-surface temperatures is often debat...
Coral reefs are among the most threatened ecosystem, partly due to the sustained and ongoing effects...
Corals in the Gulf withstand summer temperatures up to 10 °C higher than corals elsewhere and have ...
Coral reefs, one of the world’s most ecologically and socioeconomically important ecosystems, are in...
The findings in this paper show that Arabian Gulf (Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Sharjah) corals have already be...
Coral Reefs are rapidly deteriorating in response to an onslaught of human-mediated stressors. Just ...
Aim: Predictions for the future of coral reefs are largely based on thermal exposure and poorly acco...
Coral reefs are threatened by climate change as coral-algal symbioses are currently living close to ...