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Global coral bleaching crisis worsens after hottest year

2025-04-24
NEW YORK: More than four-fifths of the world`s coral reef areas have been affected by devastating mass bleaching spurred by record-high ocean temperatures, turning many once-colourful reefs a ghostly pale hue, scientific authorities said on Wednesday.

Bleaching is triggered by anomalies in water temperature thateause coralsto expelthe colorfulalgaelivingin their tissues. Without the algae`s help in delivering nutrients tothe corals,the corals cannotsurvive.

The world`s fourth mass bleaching event, which scientists declared one year ago, has shown few signs of slowing down, according to the International Coral Reef Initiative and data from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration which track reef health.

Instead, it has grown to be the most widespread on record, with 84pc of reef areas from the Indian Ocean to the Atlantic to the Pacific subjected to intense heat stress for a duration expected to cause bleaching as of March 2025.

Last year was the hottest on record and the first to reach over 1.5 degrees Celsius warmer than pre-industrial times, contributing to unprecedented ocean temperatures and triple the previous record number of marine heatwaves around the world.

`The magnitude and extent of the heat stress is shocking,` said Melanie McField, a marine scientist working in the Caribbean. `Some reefs that had thus far escaped major heat stress and we thought to be somewhat resilient, succumbed to partial mortalities in 2024.

`Bleaching is always eerie as if a silent snowfall has descended on the reef,` she added. Previous events in 1998, 2010, and 2014-17 saw 21pe, 37pc and 68pc of reefs subjected to bleaching-level heat stress respectively.

Marine biologists had warned early last year the world`s reefs were on the verge of a mass bleaching following months of record-breaking ocean heat fuelled by humaninduced climate change and the El Nino climate pattern, which yields unusually warm ocean temperatures along the equator and in the Pacific.-Reuters