Marine heatwaves can lead to rapid changes in entire communities, including in the case of shallow coral reefs the potential overgrowth of algae. Here we tested experimentally the differential thermal tolerance between algae and coral species from the Red Sea through the measurement of thermal performance curves and the assessment of thermal limits. Differences across functional groups (algae vs corals) were apparent for two key thermal performance metrics. First, two reef-associated algae species (Halimeda tuna and Turbinaria ornata,) had higher lethal thermal limits than two coral species (Pocillopora verrucosa and Stylophora pistillata) conferring those species of algae with a clear advantage during heatwaves by surpassing the thermal th...
Increasing seawater temperatures are being measured worldwide, causing coral bleaching events during...
Scleractinian coral populations are increasingly exposed to conditions above their upper thermal lim...
Author Posting. © Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography, 2013. This article is...
Marine heatwaves can lead to rapid changes in entire communities, including in the case of shallow c...
Global warming is resulting in unprecedented levels of coral mortality due to mass bleaching events ...
Coral reefs are under major threat from ocean warming. When temperatures become too high corals blea...
Corals from the northern Red Sea, in particular the Gulf of Aqaba (GoA), have exceptionally high ble...
Corals from the northern Red Sea, in particular the Gulf of Aqaba (GoA), have exceptionally high ble...
Scleractinian corals are animal partners in exquisite symbioses with a suite of algal, microbial, fu...
Anthropogenic climate change is causing an increase in the frequency and severity of marine heat wav...
Tropical coral reefs are one of the most impressive and diverse ecosystems on the face of the earth....
Coralline algae provide important ecosystem services. In situ observations of how they respond to di...
Corals from the northern Red Sea, in particular the Gulf of Aqaba (GoA), have exceptionally high ble...
Coralline algae are foundation species in many hard-bottom ecosystems acting as a settlement substra...
Global warming is resulting in unprecedented levels of coral mortality due to mass bleaching events ...
Increasing seawater temperatures are being measured worldwide, causing coral bleaching events during...
Scleractinian coral populations are increasingly exposed to conditions above their upper thermal lim...
Author Posting. © Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography, 2013. This article is...
Marine heatwaves can lead to rapid changes in entire communities, including in the case of shallow c...
Global warming is resulting in unprecedented levels of coral mortality due to mass bleaching events ...
Coral reefs are under major threat from ocean warming. When temperatures become too high corals blea...
Corals from the northern Red Sea, in particular the Gulf of Aqaba (GoA), have exceptionally high ble...
Corals from the northern Red Sea, in particular the Gulf of Aqaba (GoA), have exceptionally high ble...
Scleractinian corals are animal partners in exquisite symbioses with a suite of algal, microbial, fu...
Anthropogenic climate change is causing an increase in the frequency and severity of marine heat wav...
Tropical coral reefs are one of the most impressive and diverse ecosystems on the face of the earth....
Coralline algae provide important ecosystem services. In situ observations of how they respond to di...
Corals from the northern Red Sea, in particular the Gulf of Aqaba (GoA), have exceptionally high ble...
Coralline algae are foundation species in many hard-bottom ecosystems acting as a settlement substra...
Global warming is resulting in unprecedented levels of coral mortality due to mass bleaching events ...
Increasing seawater temperatures are being measured worldwide, causing coral bleaching events during...
Scleractinian coral populations are increasingly exposed to conditions above their upper thermal lim...
Author Posting. © Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography, 2013. This article is...