School of Marine and Tropical Biology, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia.
PLoS One. 2013 Jul 24;8(7):e70400. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0070400. Print 2013.
Evidence of global climate change and rising sea surface temperatures (SSTs) is now well documented in the scientific literature. With corals already living close to their thermal maxima, increases in SSTs are of great concern for the survival of coral reefs. Cloud feedback processes may have the potential to constrain SSTs, serving to enforce an "ocean thermostat" and promoting the survival of coral reefs. In this study, it was hypothesized that cloud cover can affect summer SSTs in the tropics. Detailed direct and lagged relationships between cloud cover and SST across the central Great Barrier Reef (GBR) shelf were investigated using data from satellite imagery and in situ temperature and light loggers during two relatively hot summers (2005 and 2006) and two relatively cool summers (2007 and 2008). Across all study summers and shelf positions, SSTs exhibited distinct drops during periods of high cloud cover, and conversely, SST increases during periods of low cloud cover, with a three-day temporal lag between a change in cloud cover and a subsequent change in SST. Cloud cover alone was responsible for up to 32.1% of the variation in SSTs three days later. The relationship was strongest in both El Niño (2005) and La Niña (2008) study summers and at the inner-shelf position in those summers. SST effects on subsequent cloud cover were weaker and more variable among study summers, with rising SSTs explaining up to 21.6% of the increase in cloud cover three days later. This work quantifies the often observed cloud cooling effect on coral reefs. It highlights the importance of incorporating local-scale processes into bleaching forecasting models, and encourages the use of remote sensing imagery to value-add to coral bleaching field studies and to more accurately predict risks to coral reefs.
气候变化和海平面温度(SST)上升的证据在科学文献中已有充分记录。由于珊瑚已经生活在接近其热极值的地方,SST 的上升对珊瑚礁的生存构成了极大的威胁。云反馈过程可能具有限制 SST 的潜力,起到“海洋恒温器”的作用,并促进珊瑚礁的生存。在这项研究中,假设云量可以影响热带地区的夏季 SST。使用卫星图像和现场温度和光照记录仪的数据,研究了云量与大堡礁中部(GBR)大陆架上的 SST 之间的直接和滞后关系,研究跨越了两个相对炎热的夏季(2005 年和 2006 年)和两个相对凉爽的夏季(2007 年和 2008 年)。在所有研究夏季和大陆架位置,SST 在高云量期间明显下降,相反,在低云量期间 SST 增加,云量变化与随后的 SST 变化之间存在三天的时间滞后。云量单独解释了 SST 三天后变化的 32.1%。在厄尔尼诺(2005 年)和拉尼娜(2008 年)研究夏季以及这些夏季的内大陆架位置,这种关系最强。在研究夏季中,SST 对随后的云量的影响较弱且更具可变性,上升的 SST 解释了 SST 三天后云量增加的 21.6%。这项工作量化了经常观察到的云对珊瑚礁的冷却效应。它强调了将局部尺度过程纳入白化预测模型的重要性,并鼓励使用遥感图像为珊瑚白化现场研究增值,并更准确地预测珊瑚礁的风险。