T. Nakamura et R. Van Woesik, Water-flow rates and passive diffusion partially explain differential survival of corals during the 1998 bleaching event, MAR ECOL-PR, 212, 2001, pp. 301-304
In the western Pacific during 1998, coral bleaching, or the paling of coral
s through loss of pigmentation or loss of symbiotic algae (zooxanthellae),
coincided with some of the warmest sea-surface temperatures (SSTs) on recor
d. However, there was considerable spatial variation in coral survivorship;
for example, corals of the same species at different locations around the
Ryukyu Islands (Japan), within kilometers of each other, showed vastly diff
erent responses. Some locations experienced 100% coral mortality while othe
r locations, nearby, suffered little coral mortality. Here we show experime
ntal evidence for high survivorship of Acropora digitifera coral colonies t
hat were subjected to both high SSTs (ranging from 26.22 to 33.65 degreesC)
and high-water flow (50 to 70 cm s(-1)), while corals that were subjected
to both high SSTs and low-water now (2 to 3 cm s(-1)) showed low survivorsh
ip. All experiments were conducted under high irradiance (similar to 95% ph
otosynthetically active radiation). We also empirically show that no coral
mortality occurred when SSTs were below 30 degreesC (ranging from 26.64 to
29.74 degreesC) under similar flow regimes. The spatial differences in cora
l mortality during the 1998 bleaching event may have been, in part, a resul
t of differences in water-flow rates that induced differential rates of pas
sive diffusion, which varied among habitats.