NOAA and partners race to rescue remaining Florida corals from historic ocean heat wave

(Climate.gov would like to especially thank reviewers Jacqueline De La Cour and Jennifer Moore for their contributions to this article.)

In mid-July 2023, heat-stressed corals in the southern Florida Keys began bleaching—expelling their food-producing algal partners—amid the hottest water temperatures ever documented in the region during the satellite record (dating back to 1985). As weeks of heat stress have continued to accumulate, bleaching and death have become more widespread, raising fears of a mass mortality event on the region’s already fragile reefs.

Animation of maps of build-up of coral heat stress in waters around Florida

Animated satellite-based map showing the build-up of ocean heat stress in the waters around Florida between June 25 and July 23, 2023. Coral reefs in the southern portion of the Florida Keys have been experiencing extreme heat stress for weeks. In areas where the Degree Heating Week (DHW), which is directly related to the timing and intensity of coral bleaching, reached 4 °C-weeks, significant coral bleaching is expected; in areas where the DHW reached 8 °C-weeks, severe coral bleaching and significant mortality are expected. NOAA Climate.gov image, based on NOAA Coral Reef Watch data.

NOAA and its state agency, university, and non-profit partners in the Mission: Iconic Reef project—Coral Restoration Foundation, Reef Renewal USA, Mote Marine Laboratory, University of Miami, Nova Southeastern University, the Reef Institute, and the Florida Aquarium—are responding to the crisis with a variety of measures that they hope will safeguard the Reef’s remaining live corals, protect corals being grown in underwater nurseries, and preserve live fragments of all genetically unique staghorn and elkhorn coral that remain on Florida’s Coral Reef. Reef conservation teams have already relocated thousands of nursery coral colonies to tanks at the Florida Institute of Oceanography’s Keys Marine Lab for rehabilitation and safekeeping, hopefully for just the short-term.

Historic heat

The global ocean has been record warm in 2023, with well above average surface water temperatures not just in the tropical Pacific Ocean (where El Niño is underway), but also across the North Atlantic, the Caribbean, and the Gulf of Mexico.

Globe-style map of ocean temperatures showing warmth in the Atlantic

Much of the global ocean was warmer than average in July 2023. Nearly the entire North Atlantic was warmer than average (red colors) during the week of July 17-23. NOAA Climate.gov image, based on Coral Reef Watch data from NOAA View.

Coral bleaching is expected to begin when water temperatures reach at least 1 degree Celsius (about 2 degrees Fahrenheit) above the usual summertime maximum (called the Maximum Monthly Mean, or MMM temperature) at a given reef location. In the Florida Keys, NOAA Coral Reef Watch says that the MMM is 29.63 degrees Celsius, or 85.33 degrees Fahrenheit, and the bleaching threshold is 30.63 degrees Celsius, or 87.13 degrees Fahrenheit, as measured by satellites.

This year, water temperatures measured by satellite crossed the bleaching threshold in the Florida Keys on June 14, and have since remained above it, even hitting 33.60 degrees C (92.48 ˚F) on July 13. (See data for individual locations throughout the Keys.) As shown in the figure below, when daily temperature anomalies exceeding the bleaching threshold accumulate to 4 Degree Heating Weeks (DHW), significant coral bleaching is expected. If the accumulation reaches at least 8 DHWs, severe, widespread bleaching and significant death, predominantly due to the corals starving, become likely.

Two line graphs showing water conditions in July 2023 compared to normal

(top) Sea surface temperatures in the Florida Keys were well above average for most of 2023 (red line), but reached record warmth in mid-July. (bottom) The accumulated heat stress so far this year (red line), measured by “Degree Heating Week,” was record-high and record-early. NOAA Climate.gov image, based on NOAA Coral Reef Watch data.

The last major mass bleaching in the Florida Keys occurred during 2014 and 2015, part of the three-year long global coral bleaching event, which became the longest, most widespread, and most damaging coral bleaching event on record. Responding to questions about the current, severe marine heat stress event, Coral Reef Watch Operations Manager, Jacqueline De La Cour said, “To our knowledge, accumulated heat stress in Florida has not been this intense or widespread, this early in the summer season, since the satellite record began in 1985. Since heat stress in Florida tends to accumulate into September, and NOAA Coral Reef Watch’s modeled Four-Month Coral Bleaching Outlook for the Florida Keys suggests it may persist for longer than that, it is possible that the environmental damage, which, in the last few weeks, includes mass coral bleaching and mortality, will exceed what has been reported so far.”

Among the possibilities, added Coral Reef Watch Director Derek Manzello, is that the damage and mortality will continue to spread from the lower and middle Keys northward to the reefs off Southeast Florida. “The bleaching-level heat stress has been creeping north over the past several weeks and is now encompassing almost the entirety of Florida’s Coral Reef,” Manzello reported in a Thursday morning briefing.

Coral rescue and relocation

Some of the reports coming in from NOAA’s coral reef restoration partners are grim. De La Cour says NOAA Coral Reef Watch has received reports of everything from partial bleaching to mass mortality from locations throughout the Florida Keys. A press release from the Coral Restoration Foundation earlier this week reported that 100 percent of the coral at several of their team's restoration sites in the lower Keys—part of the Mission: Iconic Reef project—had been lost, including at Sombrero Reef and Looe Key Nursery.

But the losses have spurred action from NOAA and its state agency, university, and non-profit partners. In response to questions sent via email, Jennifer Moore, NOAA’s Protected Coral Recovery Coordinator and the Mission: Iconic Reefs Co-lead, highlighted several efforts underway to confront the crisis:

  • Partners have halted all restoration-related planting, and are evacuating portions of their nursery-grown stock to climate-controlled labs or are exploring moving in-ocean nursery structures to deeper, cooler water,
  • The teams are considering interventions such as shading nurseries or or high-value reef sites, as well as the possibility of feeding nursery and wild corals until the waters cool off enough for their algae to return, and
  • NOAA is coordinating the rescue of two live fragments from each genetically unique staghorn and elkhorn coral remaining on Florida’s Coral Reef. (There are only ~150 unique individuals of elkhorn coral and ~300 unique individuals of staghorn coral left in the whole Florida population.) One fragment will be placed at Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota and the other at the Reef Institute in West Palm Beach. The rescue is being conducted by Coral Restoration Foundation, Keys Marine Laboratory, Mote Marine Laboratory, Nova Southeastern University, Reef Renewal USA, The Florida Aquarium, The Reef Institute, and the University of Miami.

Stay tuned

NOAA’s experimental ocean heat wave forecast indicates there’s a 70-100 percent chance that the extreme heat in the North Atlantic will persist through September-October. However, past forecasts for this area made in July for early fall have only low to medium confidence. Among the big unknowns is if and where tropical storms or hurricanes might appear. Those storms can strongly reduce ocean temperatures, but their exact number and location can’t be predicted precisely two months in advance.

We will continue to track this event in the coming weeks and provide updates about this event and the work NOAA and its partners are doing to save Florida’s Coral Reef and the marine and human communities that depend on them.

Links

Coral bleaching outlooks 

Q&A with NOAA Coral Reef Watch Director Derek Manzello

Marine heat wave explainer

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