A global database on coral recovery following marine heatwaves.

Robert van Woesik, Chelsey Kratochwill
Author Information
  1. Robert van Woesik: Institute for Global Ecology, Florida Institute of Technology, Melbourne, Florida, 32901, United States of America. rvw@fit.edu. ORCID
  2. Chelsey Kratochwill: Institute for Global Ecology, Florida Institute of Technology, Melbourne, Florida, 32901, United States of America.

Abstract

Coral reefs support the world's most diverse marine ecosystem and provide invaluable goods and services for millions of people worldwide. They are however experiencing frequent and intensive marine heatwaves that are causing Coral bleaching and mortality. Coarse-grained climate models predict that few Coral reefs will survive the 3 °C sea-surface temperature rise in the coming century. Yet, field studies show localized pockets of Coral survival and recovery even under high-temperature conditions. Quantifying recovery from marine heatwaves is central to making accurate predictions of Coral-reef trajectories into the near future. Here we introduce the world's most comprehensive database on Coral recovery following marine heatwaves and other disturbances, called Heatwaves and Coral-Recovery Database (HeatCRD) encompassing 29,205 data records spanning 44 years from 12,266 sites, 83 countries, and 160 data sources. These data provide essential information to Coral-reef scientists and managers to best guide Coral-reef conservation efforts at both local and regional scales.

References

  1. Sci Data. 2022 Jan 20;9(1):20 [PMID: 35058458]
  2. Sci Data. 2021 Aug 2;8(1):196 [PMID: 34341357]
  3. Sci Total Environ. 2023 May 1;871:162113 [PMID: 36773903]
  4. Glob Chang Biol. 2024 Jan;30(1):e17112 [PMID: 38273580]
  5. Glob Chang Biol. 2020 Mar;26(3):1367-1373 [PMID: 31912964]
  6. Sci Rep. 2016 Jul 20;6:29778 [PMID: 27435659]
  7. Sci Data. 2020 Oct 20;7(1):355 [PMID: 33082344]
  8. Ann Rev Mar Sci. 2021 Jan;13:313-342 [PMID: 32976730]
  9. Sci Rep. 2016 Dec 21;6:39666 [PMID: 28000782]
  10. Nat Commun. 2019 Mar 20;10(1):1264 [PMID: 30894534]
  11. Sci Data. 2024 Apr 11;11(1):367 [PMID: 38605060]
  12. Glob Chang Biol. 2023 Jun;29(12):3285-3303 [PMID: 36932916]

Grants

  1. OCE 2048319/National Science Foundation (NSF)

MeSH Term

Animals
Anthozoa
Coral Reefs
Ecosystem
Temperature
Climate Change

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0marinecoralheatwavesrecoverycoral-reefdatareefsworld'sprovidedatabasefollowingCoralsupportdiverseecosysteminvaluablegoodsservicesmillionspeopleworldwidehoweverexperiencingfrequentintensivecausingbleachingmortalityCoarse-grainedclimatemodelspredictwillsurvive3 °Csea-surfacetemperaturerisecomingcenturyYetfieldstudiesshowlocalizedpocketssurvivalevenhigh-temperatureconditionsQuantifyingcentralmakingaccuratepredictionstrajectoriesnearfutureintroducecomprehensivedisturbancescalledHeatwavesCoral-RecoveryDatabaseHeatCRDencompassing29205recordsspanning44years12266sites83countries160sourcesessentialinformationscientistsmanagersbestguideconservationeffortslocalregionalscalesglobal

Similar Articles

Cited By (1)