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Corals, especially those which build reefs in tropical, shal-
low waters, are highly attuned to their environmental sur-
roundings. Bleaching occurs when the corals are subjected
to repeated and/or sustained stresses which exceed their tol-
erances. When this occurs, the symbiotic algae living in the
coral tissue are ejected. The corals loose their colour and their
white, calcerous skeleton shines through the transparent tis-
sue. Corals can survive this condition for a short time and
even take up their symbionts if the stresses subside. However,
if the stresses persist, the corals will die. One well document-
ed cause of bleaching is increase of sea surface temperatures
(SSTs). A prolonged rise in SST during the hottest months of
the year by as little as 1°C above the usual monthly average
can result in a bleaching event (Glynn, 1996). The first major
CORAL BLEACHING
Figure 9. Projected areas of above normal sea temperature where coral bleaching is likely to occur for the SRES A2 scenario
by two
different models, the PCM (1.7°C increase in 100 years) and the HadCM3 (3°C increase in 100 years) by ca. 2035 (a) and by 2055 (b).
Both models project severe annual bleaching in more than 80% of the Worlds coral reefs by 2080 (Donner
et al
., 2005).