Global Warming Causes Outbreak Of Rare Algae Associated With Corals, Study Finds

This image was taken in October 2005 during the 2005 coral-bleaching event in the Caribbean. The white corals have lost their symbiotic algae and appear "bleached." (Credit: Todd LaJeunesse, Penn State)

A rare opportunity has allowed a team of biologists to evaluate corals and the essential, photosynthetic algae that live inside their cells before, during, and after a period in 2005 when global warming caused sea-surface temperatures in the Caribbean Ocean to rise.

The team, led by Penn State Assistant Professor of Biology Todd LaJeunesse, found that a rare species of algae that is tolerant of stressful environmental conditions proliferated in corals as the more-sensitive algae were being expelled from corals. The results will be published in the online version of the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B on 9 September 2009.

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About Rashid Faridi

I am Rashid Aziz Faridi ,Writer, Teacher and a Voracious Reader.
This entry was posted in BIODIVERSITY, climate change, Global Warming. Bookmark the permalink.

1 Response to Global Warming Causes Outbreak Of Rare Algae Associated With Corals, Study Finds

  1. Coral reefs are such delicate ecoysystems that they are easily disrupted by the slightest of temperature fluctuations.

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