Couch Courtney S, Burns John H R, Liu Gang, Steward Kanoelani, Gutlay Tiffany Nicole, Kenyon Jean, Eakin C Mark, Kosaki Randall K
Hawai'i Institute of Marine Biology, Kāne'ohe, Hawai'i, United States of America.
Ecosystem Sciences Division, Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center, NOAA, Honolulu, Hawai'i, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Sep 27;12(9):e0185121. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0185121. eCollection 2017.
2014 marked the sixth and most widespread mass bleaching event reported in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, home to the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument (PMNM), the world's second largest marine reserve. This event was associated with an unusual basin-scale warming in the North Pacific Ocean, with an unprecedented peak intensity of around 20°C-weeks of cumulative heat stress at Lisianksi Island. In situ bleaching surveys and satellite data were used to evaluate the relative importance of potential drivers of bleaching patterns in 2014, assess the subsequent morality and its effects on coral communities and 3D complexity, test for signs of regional acclimation, and investigate long-term change in heat stress in PMNM. Surveys conducted at four island/atoll (French Frigate Shoals, Lisianski Island, Pearl and Hermes Atoll, and Midway Atoll) showed that in 2014, percent bleaching varied considerably between islands/atolls and habitats (back reef/fore reef and depth), and was up to 91% in shallow habitats at Lisianski. The percent bleaching during the 2014 event was best explained by a combination of duration of heat stress measured by Coral Reef Watch's satellite Degree Heating Week, relative community susceptibility (bleaching susceptibility score of each taxon * the taxon's abundance relative to the total number of colonies), depth and region. Mean coral cover at permanent Lisianski monitoring sites decreased by 68% due to severe losses of Montipora dilatata complex, resulting in rapid reductions in habitat complexity. Spatial distribution of the 2014 bleaching was significantly different from the 2002 and 2004 bleaching events likely due to a combination of differences in heat stress and local acclimatization. Historical satellite data demonstrated heat stress in 2014 was unlike any previous event and that the exposure of corals to the bleaching-level heat stress has increased significantly in the northern PMNM since 1982, highlighting the increasing threat of climate change to reefs.
2014年标志着在夏威夷群岛西北部发生了有记录以来的第六次也是影响范围最广的大规模珊瑚白化事件。这里是帕帕哈瑙莫夸基亚海洋国家纪念区(PMNM)的所在地,该纪念区是世界第二大海洋保护区。这一事件与北太平洋一次异常的盆地范围变暖有关,在利相斯基岛,累积热应力达到了前所未有的峰值强度,约为20°C - 周。利用现场白化调查和卫星数据来评估2014年珊瑚白化模式潜在驱动因素的相对重要性,评估随后的死亡率及其对珊瑚群落和三维复杂性的影响,测试区域适应的迹象,并调查帕帕哈瑙莫夸基亚海洋国家纪念区热应力的长期变化。在四个岛屿/环礁(法属护卫舰浅滩、利相斯基岛、珍珠和赫尔墨斯环礁以及中途岛环礁)进行的调查显示,2014年,不同岛屿/环礁以及栖息地(礁后/礁前和深度)的白化百分比差异很大,利相斯基岛浅海栖息地的白化率高达91%。2014年事件期间的白化百分比最好由珊瑚礁观察卫星的“热周”测量的热应力持续时间、相对群落易感性(每个分类单元的白化易感性得分×该分类单元相对于总群体数量的丰度)、深度和区域的组合来解释。由于扩张蔷薇珊瑚复合体的严重损失,利相斯基岛永久监测点的平均珊瑚覆盖率下降了68%,导致栖息地复杂性迅速降低。2014年白化的空间分布与2002年和2004年的白化事件显著不同,这可能是由于热应力差异和局部适应的综合作用。历史卫星数据表明,2014年的热应力不同于以往任何事件,自1982年以来,帕帕哈瑙莫夸基亚海洋国家纪念区北部的珊瑚暴露于白化水平热应力的情况显著增加,凸显了气候变化对珊瑚礁日益增加的威胁。