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Title of Journal: Coral Reefs

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Abbravation: Coral Reefs

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Springer-Verlag

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1432-0975

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Climate change and coral reefs Trojan horse or fa

Authors: O HoeghGuldberg
Publish Date: 2009/06/02
Volume: 28, Issue: 3, Pages: 569-575
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Abstract

Maynard et al Coral Reefs 27745–749 2008a claim that much of the concern about the impacts of climate change on coral reefs has been “based on essentially untested assumptions regarding reefs and their capacity to cope with future climate change” If correct this claim has important implications for whether or not climate change represents the largest longterm threat to the sustainability of coral reefs especially given their ad hominem argument that many coral reef scientists are guilty of “popularising worstcase scenarios” at the expense of truth This article looks critically at the claims made by Maynard et al Coral Reefs 27745–749 2008a and comes to a very different conclusion with the thrust and veracity of their argument being called into question Contrary to the fears of Grigg Coral Reefs 11183–186 1992 who originally made reference to the Cassandra syndrome due to his concern about the sensationalisation of science the proposition that coral reefs face enormous challenges from climate change and ocean acidification has and is being established through “careful experimentation longterm monitoring and objective interpretation” While this is reassuring coral reef ecosystems continue to face major challenges from ocean warming and acidification Given this it is an imperative that scientists continue to maintain the rigour of their research and to communicate their conclusions as widely and clearly as possible Given the shortage of time and the magnitude of the problem there is little time to spare


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Other Papers In This Journal:

  1. Short- and long-term movements of painted lobster ( Panulirus versicolor ) on a coral reef at Northwest Island, Australia
  2. “Locally extinct” coral species Seriatopora hystrix found at upper mesophotic depths in Okinawa
  3. Competitive interactions between corals and Trididemnum solidum on Mexican Caribbean reefs
  4. Plasticity in skeletal characteristics of nursery-raised staghorn coral, Acropora cervicornis
  5. Turbinaria ornata invasion in the Tuamotu Archipelago, French Polynesia: ocean drift connectivity
  6. Characterisation of coral explants: a model organism for cnidarian–dinoflagellate studies
  7. Do no-take reserves benefit Florida’s corals? 14 years of change and stasis in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary
  8. Skeletal morphogenesis and growth mode of modern and fossil deep-water isidid gorgonians (Octocorallia) in the West Pacific (New Zealand and Sea of Okhotsk)
  9. Widespread occurrence of mycosporine-like amino acid compounds in scleractinians from French Polynesia
  10. Spawning and fertility of F 1 hybrids of the coral genus Acropora in the Indo-Pacific
  11. Measuring coral reef community metabolism using new benthic chamber technology
  12. A map of human impacts to a “pristine” coral reef ecosystem, the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument
  13. Skeletal records of community-level bleaching in Porites corals from Palau
  14. Guard crabs alleviate deleterious effects of vermetid snails on a branching coral
  15. Effect of ocean warming and acidification on the early life stages of subtropical Acropora spicifera
  16. Effects of predation on diel activity and habitat use of the coral-reef shrimp Cinetorhynchus hendersoni (Rhynchocinetidae)
  17. Quantifying the quality of coral bleaching predictions
  18. Targeted demersal fish species exhibit variable responses to long-term protection from fishing at the Houtman Abrolhos Islands
  19. Auditory sensitivity in settlement-stage larvae of coral reef fishes
  20. Visibly healthy corals exhibit variable pigment concentrations and symbiont phenotypes
  21. Light availability determines susceptibility of reef building corals to ocean acidification
  22. A physical derivation of nutrient-uptake rates in coral reefs: effects of roughness and waves
  23. Recurrent partial mortality events in winter shape the dynamics of the zooxanthellate coral Oculina patagonica at high latitude in the Mediterranean

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