DAMAGE TALLY
For the coastal town of Maragogi, the technicolor reefs and crystal blue waters of the Coral Coast have helped them build a thriving tourism industry.
Reef tourism generates an estimated 908 million reais ($175.05 million) each year for Maragogi and the nearby municipalities of Ipojuca and Sao Miguel dos Milagres, according to the conservation charity Boticario Group Foundation.
Thousands of people in the region also work in small-scale fishing, virtually the only economic alternative to tourism, said Claudio Sampaio, who teaches fishing engineering at the Federal University of Alagoas.
This year the catch for octopus, fish and prawns have all declined with the bleaching and high temperatures, adding to the existing problems of pollution and overfishing, said Johnny Antonio da Silva Lima, a 40-year-old fisherman who lives on the Coral Coast.
"It's an unbearable heat at times," Silva Lima said.
"We can feel this because we are always walking on the rocks, looking for octopuses mainly, and also fishing with pole lines on the edge of the corals. We feel it on our skin."
Most of Brazil's corals live in murkier waters, helping to shield them from the sun, and grow in mass formations that also make them more resilient, according to a 2020 study, opens new tab.
The reefs previously have only been hit by one deadly bleaching event in 2019-2020, which killed up to 50% of the region's distinct species of brain corals and 90% of its Branching Fire Coral.
The current bleaching is hitting these same species again in Coral Coast park, Mies said.
Corals are animals that have a symbiotic relationship with microalgae that live in their tissue, giving them their brilliant colors that are lost in a bleaching event.
"A bleached coral would be something like if us human beings all of a sudden had transparent skin and organs. So you could see our bones underneath our skin," Mies said.
Corals can recover if the waters cool in time for them to be repopulated by microalgae.
Whether the current bleaching becomes the most severe on record nationally will depend on whether the Abrolhos reef further south is also as damaged as it was in 2020, Mies said.
So far, the Abrolhos reef has experienced limited impact. But with waters expected to remain warm through April, Mies says that could change.
Whatever survives should be studied to determine what traits helped to make it more resilient, as scientists are trying to learn which species might stand up to climate change, said Asner of the Allen Coral Atlas program.
"Those will be the genetic individuals that will propagate and flourish in some future world," he said.
REUTERS
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