Marshall Island Bleaching

Alan E Strong Alan.E.Strong at noaa.gov
Tue Sep 17 00:16:58 EDT 2002


John,
Now that would seem to make sense...we have no active HotSpots in the
Marshall Islands as of this time...close...but not there.  Low tides would
be
our next suspicion ..due to nearby excessive heat anomaly and unusual El
Nino??

Cheers,
Al Strong
NOAA's Coral Reef Watch Program

John Naughton wrote:

> I just returned from two weeks of extensive coral reef surveys at
> Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands.  Our surveys concentrated in the
> northern part of the atoll (basing out of Roi-Namur) and the eastern or
> windward reefs.  We also recorded extensive bleaching of the top 8 to10
> inches of many species in shallow water.  However, we believe the
> bleaching was due to a series of very low tides coupled with light winds
> and periods of heavy rain.  Hopefully most colonies will recover rapidly
> with the return of more normal conditions.
>
> Aloha,       John
>
> John Naughton
> Pacific Islands Environmental Coordinator
> National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA
> Honolulu, Hawaii
>
> Clive Wilkinson wrote:
>
> > >Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 17:23:07 -0700 (PDT)
> > >From: Dean Jacobson <atolldino at yahoo.com>
> > >Subject: Marshall Island Bleaching
> > >To: c.wilkinson at aims.gov.au
> > >X-Scanned-By: MIMEDefang 2.6 (www dot roaringpenguin dot com slash
> > mimedefang)
> > >
> > >Greetings:
> > >I tried to submit a report to the NOAA website, but no
> > >joy.  Perhaps you could forward this report to any
> > >other interested parties.
> > >
> > >Coral bleaching, appears to have occured in Majuro,
> > >the capital of the Marshall Islands, for the first
> > >time.  This is of consern since the coral reefs here
> > >are very healthy (except where pollution is
> > >concentrated) and previously unaffected by bleaching.
> > >This event is restricted to a very shallow
> > >near-surface layer, and was first noticed on Sept 6
> > >(it probably appeared a few days earlier)following the
> > >observation of an unusually warm surface layer (only a
> > >meter or less deep)in the Majuro lagoon on Sept 4 (at
> > >which time no bleaching was yet observed). This
> > >surface water felt unconfrontably warm, almost hot, to
> > >an acclimated swimer.
> > >Later during the weekend I explored Majuro's SE ocean
> > >shore, and again found bleaching only of the most
> > >shallow corals (and intertidal zooanthids), along an 8
> > >mile stretch.  I would guess the entire atoll has
> > >experienced bleaching (the northern shore has not been
> > >sampled).  Local residents who were gleaning during
> > >the low tide report that they have never before
> > >witnessed this phenomenona.
> > >Much of the bleached coral emerged during the
> > >unusually low tides of Sept 9 and 10, but the
> > >bleaching clearly appears to have begun earlier, while
> > >completely emmersed.  We had very still, hot weather
> > >on Sept 1.  Further, the easterlies have been more
> > >active and consistant then the year earlier.  I
> > >suspect that a warm water mass was advected into our
> > >region during this event.
> > >
> > >Species affected include the uppermost intertidal
> > >Acropora (blue axial tips, A. seriata?) comingled with
> > >a rose-colored pocillopora, which also has bleached.
> > >Tip bleaching, marking the shallow thermocline below
> > >the shallow layer of warm water was found in Acropora
> > >nobilis and our large pale-margined Pocillopora sp.
> > >
> > >I am photo-documenting selected colonies at a site in
> > >my back yard (ocean side rock quarry pool), and will
> > >be monitoring their progress in coming weeks.
> > >
> > >Cheers,
> > >Dean Jacobson, Ph.D., instructor of Marine Science at
> > >the College of the Marshall Islands and
> > >Board member of a new NGO: NCCMI, Nature Conservation
> > >Communities of the Marshall Islands.
> > >
> > >__________________________________________________
> > >Yahoo! - We Remember
> > >9-11: A tribute to the more than 3,000 lives lost
> > >http://dir.remember.yahoo.com/tribute
> > >
> > ~~~~~~~
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> > digests, please see http://www.coral.noaa.gov/lists/coral-list.html .
>
> ~~~~~~~
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--
**** <>< ******* <>< ******* <>< ******* <>< *******
Alan E. Strong
Team Leader, Marine Applications Science Team (MAST)
Coral Reef Watch Project Coordinator
Phys Scientist/Oceanographer
  NOAA/NESDIS/ORA/ORAD -- E/RA3
  NOAA Science Center -- RM 711W
  5200 Auth Road
  Camp Springs, MD 20746-4304
        Alan.E.Strong at noaa.gov
             301-763-8102 x170
              FAX: 301-763-8572
  http://orbit-net.nesdis.noaa.gov/orad

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------

  Alan E. Strong, Ph. D. <Alan.E.Strong at noaa.gov>
  Oceanographer/Team Leader
  NOAA/NESDIS/ORA
  Oceanic Research & Applications Division

  Alan E. Strong, Ph. D.
  Oceanographer/Team Leader                 <Alan.E.Strong at noaa.gov>
  NOAA/NESDIS/ORA
  Oceanic Research & Applications Division
  NOAA Science Center 5200 Auth Road        Cellular: 443-822-3668
  Camp Springs                              Fax: 301-763-8108
  MD                                        Work: 301-763-8102 x170
  20746
  USA
  Additional Information:
  Last Name     Strong
  First Name    Alan E.
  Version       2.1



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