Coral Bleaching
May 2016
What is coral bleaching and what can you do to help? Find out in our video! #EarthIsBlue Seaview Survey Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument National Marine Sanctuary of American Samoa
Transcript
This is Big Momma, one of the largest corals
in the world, located in the Valley of the Giants
in National Marine Sanctuary of American
Samoa.
By working together, we can protect corals
like Big Momma from a warming ocean.
When we burn fossil fuels like oil, coal
and gas for electricity to power our homes
and for gas for our cars, we produce carbon
dioxide and release it into the atmosphere.
This carbon dioxide builds up and acts like
a heat-trapping blanket, warming Earth.
As Earth’s atmosphere warms, so does the
ocean.
Unfortunately, warmer ocean temperatures stress
corals. Corals depend on colorful photosynthetic algae
for food and oxygen, but when the water
becomes too warm, stressed corals evict their
algae partners. Without the algae, corals
become bleached and can die. Reef ecosystems
around the world depend on healthy corals.
Without them, the entire reef ecosystem suffers,
and can collapse entirely. This directly affects
the people and cultures that depend on coral
reefs for food, protection, and their livelihoods.
Bleaching can transform a reef over the course
of just a few months. In recent years scientists
have witnessed widespread bleaching events.
We all have a role to play in protecting coral
reefs. In California, entire communities are
signing up for green energy through their
local utility companies. Community choices
like this can help us reduce carbon dioxide
emissions that thicken the heat-trapping blanket
and warm the ocean.
By working together, we
can slow ocean warming and help protect vibrant
places like coral reefs for the future.