Conservationists take drastic measures to save coral reefs from climate change (2024)

Coral reef ecosystems support a quarter of all marine life on Earth, but they are slowly dying under the relentless stresses of overfishing, pollution, disease and climate change. As part of our ongoing series “Saving Species,” William Brangham dives into the steps that scientists are taking to try to preserve the corals that remain.

Notice: Transcripts are machine and human generated and lightly edited for accuracy. They may contain errors.

  • John Yang:

    Coral reef ecosystems support a quarter of all the earth's marine life, but around the world they are slowly dying under the relentless stress of overfishing, pollution, disease and climate change. William Brangham dives into the steps scientists are taking to try to save corals. It's part of our ongoing series Saving Species.

  • William Brangham (voice-over):

    Just off the Florida Keys and urgent Rescue Mission Continues. These scientists are carefully returning pieces of coral back into the ocean and reattaching them to this tree like coral nurseries. For the last few months, these corals have had to live here in tanks on land, because their ocean home was too hot.

  • Bailey Thomasson, Coral Restoration Foundation:

    It looked like it was just melting away. And that's something that we had never ever really observed before on the reefs.

  • William Brangham (voice-over):

    Bailey Thomasson works with the Coral Restoration Foundation. Last summer amid a record ocean heatwave, she and her colleagues visited Florida's Sombrero Reef and were stunned by what they saw.

  • Bailey Thomasson:

    It was almost like the coral had gotten so stressed from the 90 degree plus Fahrenheit waters that had come that week that the tissue just died. And it just started sloughing off of the coral skeleton, and we were too late.

    Without really even saying anything to each other. We gave each other since personal space just to grieve these corals grieve what at that moment we knew was probably going to be a really hard summer.

  • William Brangham (voice-over):

    Last year brought on what's called a mass bleaching event, when corals lose their vibrant colors, because they've expelled the algae that typically lives in its tissue and provides it with food.

    They're ailing, but not dead. They can bounce back if the water cools. But last summer that relief never came. Marine temperatures off the coast of Florida were the warmest ever recorded. Manatee Bay in late July exceeded 101 degrees Fahrenheit, possibly the hottest ocean temperature ever recorded on Earth.

  • Cindy Lewis, Director, Keys Marine Lab:

    We had ocean temperatures and like down in 30 feet to 60 feet and water that were 92 degrees. That's like hot tub weather.

  • Cindy Lewis:

    What it looked like here in a matter of the first two to three weeks when they were bringing 5,000 corals and more that were transported through here. It looked like a giant coral mash unit, with people running in and out with coolers of water and getting corals into their tanks and everything else.

  • William Brangham (voice-over):

    Keys Marine Lab and other sites throughout Florida stored thousands of coral specimens in these tanks known as raceways. They did so not simply to save an animal, but to save an entire ecosystem. Coral reefs cover a mere fraction of a percent of the ocean floor, but they are teeming with life a quarter of all marine life on the planet.

  • Cindy Lewis:

    They're like these submerged rain forests with incredible biodiversity. as much if not more so than Amazon rainforest.

  • William Brangham (voice-over):

    When corals die, that habitat is lost, often leaving behind only oxygen choking algae, and making coastlines vulnerable to storms and erosion. CRF and others felt there was no other choice to save critical corals whose populations had already plunged by 90 percent over the last 50 years.

  • Bailey Thomasson:

    It was definitely an emotional feeling to see these corals that we've worked with for the past years that are supposed to be in the ocean that's their home, sitting in these raceways for no other reason than the fact that they have to be there or they die.

  • William Brangham (voice-over):

    The drastic decision to pull these corals out of their habitat and store them on land, which had never been done on this scale saved them. And since October, thousands of corals have been returned to the ocean, but with the potential of another hotter than normal summer this year. It's led scientists to redouble their efforts towards worst case scenarios.

    Collecting genetic samples of corals and storing them permanently in tanks on land as a long term insurance policy, even selectively breeding corals to be more heat tolerant.

  • Bailey Thomasson:

    Even though this was something we had never done before having gone through it, we feel very prepared to sort of pull this sort of rescue and triage mission out again, if and when needed. The idea is to not do this again.

  • William Brangham:

    Apart from those efforts to keep corals alive in the ocean here in the stretch of rural Virginia, another effort is underway. They're trying to preserve the biodiversity of corals, but using a very different technique.

    Mike Henley, Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute: So we've got our coral in our chamber with our (inaudible) protection solution, and what we're going to do now put it in our rack and get ready for the plunge into the liquid nitrogen.

  • William Brangham (voice-over):

    Mike Henley is with the Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute. What is this temperature here?

  • Mike Henley:

    Is minus 196 degrees Celsius and we just go really quick.

  • William Brangham:

    Wow.

  • William Brangham (voice-over):

    He's demonstrating a process known as isochoric vitrification at the Institute's Bio Repository in Front Royal Virginia. It's taking a small fragment of coral, a little colony of polyps each dot individual animal and suspending them in animation at incredibly cold temperatures.

  • William Brangham:

    So what's happening inside there right now?

  • Mike Henley:

    So that as that temperature is dropping, that solution is actually turning into a glass like state so that the coral is suspended. It's frozen with that ice but still alive and can remain that way for in theory, hundreds if not thousands of years.

  • William Brangham (voice-over):

    Up until now, this technique has only been used for coral sperm and larvae, not entire living animals.

  • William Brangham:

    Were you convinced at the beginning that this was going to work as a technique?

  • Mary Hagedorn, Research Scientist, Smithsonian Institution:

    No, not at all. Really. It's very much this this stuff of science fiction, we're working at the very edge of biology, engineering, and thermodynamics.

  • William Brangham (voice-over):

    The Smithsonian's Mary Hagedorn spearheads this effort to cryo preserve coral. She spoke to us from Coconut Island off the coast of Oahu where she lives and works. She said that once a preserved coral is thawed before it can be reintroduced to the ocean. It has a long road to get back to health.

  • Mary Hagedorn:

    I sort of think of it as a, you know, sort of a open heart patient that's gone through this rigorous operation is very stressed and then needs special care to get back home to its you know, to their family.

  • William Brangham (voice-over):

    But while reanimating a preserved coral remains challenging, Hagedorn emphasized that cryopreservation can do what other conservation methods can't. A single cryo tank could hold thousands of coral species far more than any raceway tank, and it could theoretically preserve them for years at a stretch. And the hope is for this coral preservation technique to become grassroots.

  • Mary Hagedorn:

    For this type of technology, we are going to make it inexpensive, and very easy to do. And so the average professional will be able to do this. We will train them and they will be able to do it and secure their own reef material.

  • William Brangham:

    So you really do envision like an army of people on reefs all over the world, taking these samples, freezing them locally, and keeping them stored away for this sort of worst case scenario.

  • Mary Hagedorn:

    Yes. You saw the beginnings of that Front Royal, that is the beginning of that army.

  • William Brangham (voice-over):

    All of it. Hagedorn says is for the critical goal of keeping these species alive, well into the future.

  • Mary Hagedorn:

    This is what drives me it really is the threat of extinction and the worry of extinction. I very much want the children, you know, 100 years from now to be able to see a coral reef if at all possible. You know, it's one of the most extraordinary places on earth is so critical to our life on Earth. And I want it to continue and if I can play even a small role in that. I am happy to do that.

  • William Brangham (voice-over):

    Securing one of the most fundamental ecosystems on the planet through an uncertain future. For PBS News Weekend, I'm William Brangham.

  • Conservationists take drastic measures to save coral reefs from climate change (2024)

    FAQs

    What are some things a conservationist might do to help a reef ecosystem survive environmental change like we are seeing today? ›

    10 ways to protect CORAL REEFS
    • Choose sustainable seafood. Learn how to make smart seafood choices at www.fishwatch.gov.
    • Conserve Water. ...
    • Volunteer. ...
    • Corals are already a gift. ...
    • Long-lasting light bulbs are a bright idea. ...
    • If you dive, don't touch. ...
    • Check sunscreen active ingredients. ...
    • Be a marine crusader.
    Jun 12, 2023

    What are scientists doing to save coral reefs? ›

    In addition to the monitoring work conducted by satellites and buoys, NOAA conducts research, assessment, and restoration projects of coral reefs in marine reserves and among deep-sea coral banks. NOAA is also working to remove tons of marine debris from the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands and restore damaged reefs.

    What are the threats to the Great Barrier Reef reading answers? ›

    Threats
    • Coral Bleaching. The Reef has suffered four mass coral bleaching events in just seven years due to heat stress caused by climate change.
    • Water quality. ...
    • Crown-of-Thorns Starfish. ...
    • Coastal development.

    How are humans trying to save coral reefs? ›

    EPA protects coral reefs by implementing Clean Water Act programs that protect water quality in watersheds and coastal zones of coral reef areas. EPA also supports efforts to monitor and assess the condition of U.S. coral reefs, and conducts research into the causes of coral reef deterioration.

    What conservation efforts are being used for coral reefs? ›

    About the NOAA Coral Reef Conservation Program

    We focus on four main pillars of work: Increase resilience to climate change. Reduce land-based sources of pollution. Improve fisheries' sustainability.

    What are three things that happen to coral reefs due to climate change? ›

    Climate change leads to: A warming ocean: causes thermal stress that contributes to coral bleaching and infectious disease. Sea level rise: may lead to increases in sedimentation for reefs located near land-based sources of sediment. Sedimentation runoff can lead to the smothering of coral.

    What is killing the coral reefs? ›

    Pollution, overfishing, destructive fishing practices using dynamite or cyanide, collecting live corals for the aquarium market, mining coral for building materials, and a warming climate are some of the many ways that people damage reefs all around the world every day.

    What are the positive effects of climate change on coral reefs? ›

    Researchers from Northeastern University's Marine Science Center and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have found that moderate ocean acidification and warming can actually enhance the growth rate of one reef-​​building coral species.

    Are coral reefs still dying? ›

    Coral reefs around the world are turning white and dying. Today scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration declared the world is currently experiencing its fourth global bleaching event on record. Bleaching is bad.

    What are 5 interesting facts about coral reefs? ›

    Seven Surprising Facts about Coral
    • 1: Corals Are Animals. ...
    • 2: Corals Can Be Fluorescent. ...
    • 3: Corals Eat Plankton/Small Fish. ...
    • 4: There Are Hundreds of Coral Species of All Colors, Shapes and Sizes. ...
    • 5: Corals Can Move. ...
    • 6: Corals Support 25 Percent of Ocean Life. ...
    • 7: Climate Change Is the Biggest Threat to Corals.
    Nov 24, 2021

    What of coral reefs will be destroyed by 2050? ›

    By 2050, estimates predict nearly all of the reefs will be threatened, with 75% facing high, very high, or critical threat levels.

    What are 3 issues facing the Great Barrier Reef? ›

    Sadly, the Great Barrier Reef is under pressure. Climate change, rising temperatures and human interference threaten its survival. We need to take action to protect and preserve this natural wonder for years to come.

    What is threatening the reef? ›

    Increased ocean temperatures and changing ocean chemistry are the greatest global threats to coral reef ecosystems. These threats are caused by warmer atmospheric temperatures and increasing levels of carbon dioxide dissolved in seawater. As atmospheric temperatures rise, so do seawater temperatures.

    Which creature is a threat to the reef? ›

    Fish, marine worms, barnacles, crabs, snails and sea stars all prey on the soft inner tissues of coral polyps. In extreme cases, entire reefs can be devastated if predator populations become too high.

    What are some conservation efforts in the marine ecosystem? ›

    Marine protected areas (MPAs)

    MPAs are designated areas in the ocean where human activities, such as fishing and oil and gas extraction, are restricted or prohibited. This protects critical habitats such as coral reefs or kelp forests for marine species such as sea turtles or whales to thrive.

    What are the current conservation efforts doing in the Great Barrier Reef? ›

    Farmers are running projects that are helping improve Reef water quality. Scientists are investigating ways to make the Reef more resilient to climate change. Community groups are involved in clean-up events to stop marine debris from entering the Reef.

    References

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