Litcius/Paper detail

Physical Diagnosis of the 2016 Great Barrier Reef Bleaching Event

Kristopher B. Karnauskas

2020Geophysical Research Letters18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Widespread coral bleaching across the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) in 2016 is often reportedly caused by El Niño and/or global warming. However, the GBR is not in a region where it is straightforward to anticipate sea surface temperature (SST) warming during El Niño, and the role of climate change is unclear. This study uses a diverse range of observations to investigate the physical causes of SST anomalies that developed on the GBR in 2016. Warm SST anomalies developed in two stages. Initial warming was caused by El Niño shifting the global‐scale pattern of convection, increasing solar radiation in the Coral Sea. The warm anomaly was extended and amplified near the coast by a terrestrial heat wave propagating across eastern Australia, further warming the GBR through turbulent heat flux. It is concluded that El Niño caused the SST anomaly, and global warming increased its amplitude and extended it by several months.

Topics & Concepts

Anomaly (physics)Sea surface temperatureCoral bleachingGlobal warmingClimatologyEnvironmental scienceGreat barrier reefOceanographyEffects of global warming on oceansAtmospheric sciencesHeat waveConvectionClimate changeReefGeologyGeographyMeteorologyPhysicsCondensed matter physicsCoral and Marine Ecosystems StudiesOceanographic and Atmospheric ProcessesTropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research