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In Dead Water: Merging of climate change with - UNEP

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global bleaching event was recorded in 1998. Since then, several<br />

regional and local events occured, such as in the Caribbean<br />

in 2005 (Wilkinson, C. and Souter, D., 2008). Bleaching<br />

affects the majority <strong>of</strong> the tropical reefs around the World,<br />

<strong>with</strong> a large proportion dying. The rate <strong>of</strong> recovery is different<br />

from region to region, <strong>with</strong> healthy reefs (i.e. reefs not or only<br />

marginally stressed by other pressures) generally recovering<br />

and re-colonising quicker than reefs in poor condition. Some<br />

<strong>of</strong> the latter did not recover at all. The dead coral skeletons are<br />

broken down by wave activity and storms into coral rubble,<br />

leading to a <strong>change</strong> in the whole ecosystem from a rich and<br />

diverse coral reef into a much more impoverished community<br />

dominated by algae.<br />

Figure 10. The impacts <strong>of</strong> coral reefs from rising sea temperatures. When coral reefs become heat-exposed they die, leaving the<br />

white dead coral, also known as bleaching. With even moderate pollution, the coral are easily overgrown <strong>with</strong> algae, or broken<br />

down by wave activity or storms, leaving only ‘coral rubble’ on the ocean bed (Donner et al., 2005).

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