Human Hothouse Spurs Longest Coral Die-Off on Record

It’s like a bad dream from which one cannot wake.

robertscribbler

The big coral die-off began in the Western Pacific as a massive ocean temperature spike built up during 2014. Back then, ocean heat accumulation had hit a very high ramp. A vicious, century-and-a-half long increase in atmospheric greenhouse gasses re-radiated greater and greater portions of the sun’s energy hitting the Earth — transferring the bulk (about 90 percent) to the world ocean system.

Major Coral Bleaching Event

(A report out today from AGU finds that the world is now experiencing its longest coral die-off event on record. Image source: AGU.)

By 2015, as one of the strongest El Ninos on record began to extend its influence across the globe, a broad region stretching from the Western Pacific, through the Central Pacific and on into the Eastern Pacific and Caribbean were all experiencing mass coral die-offs. Into early 2016, die-off events again expanded taking in Australian waters and sections of the Indian Ocean off…

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2 thoughts on “Human Hothouse Spurs Longest Coral Die-Off on Record

  1. All indications are that from the very beginning, our species has had the same urge to reproduce that every other species has. Apparently, in the majority of individuals of our species, the urge is more powerful than our unique abilities to understand logic or prudence.

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