Since the 1980s, coral bleaching has caused widespread damage to reefs all around the world. Australia’s 2,300-km-long Great Barrier Reef has suffered extensive damage, with several kilometers of coral colonies that are dead or bleached completely white. Here, as on many other reefs, large sections of the once colorful underwater world have been destroyed and vanished.
The reason for this is steadily rising ocean temperatures, an indisputable effect of climate change. When the weather phenomenon “El Niño” becomes part of the equation, causing severe storms on land and increasing water temperatures along the west coast of South America every four years, the coral reefs don’t stand a chance.
The permanently elevated water temperatures, which have increased far beyond natural fluctuations, disturb the coexistence of the coral and the microscopic algae that, under normal conditions, settle on its surface and create its magnificent colors. This symbiotic relationship has advantages for both sides—the coral provides a safe habitat for the algae and the algae perform photosynthesis to produce oxygen and glucose that the coral needs to survive.