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Ocean currents magnify upwelling and deliver nutritional subsidies to reef-building corals during El Niño heatwaves.

Michael D FoxRobin Guillaume-CastelClinton B EdwardsJ GlanzJamison M GoveJ A Mattias GreenE JuhlinJennifer E SmithGareth J Williams
Published in: Science advances (2023)
Marine heatwaves are triggering coral bleaching events and devastating coral populations globally, highlighting the need to identify processes promoting coral survival. Here, we show that acceleration of a major ocean current and shallowing of the surface mixed layer enhanced localized upwelling on a central Pacific coral reef during the three strongest El Niño-associated marine heatwaves of the past half century. These conditions mitigated regional declines in primary production and bolstered local supply of nutritional resources to corals during a bleaching event. The reefs subsequently suffered limited post-bleaching coral mortality. Our results reveal how large-scale ocean-climate interactions affect reef ecosystems thousands of kilometers away and provide a valuable framework for identifying reefs that may benefit from such biophysical linkages during future bleaching events.
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