• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

When Desert Dust Hits Coral Reefs They Create Surprising Carbon Sinks

January 31, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

As if there were not already enough reasons to save coral reefs, scientists studying the Red Sea have discovered another one: they can be major sinks for carbon dioxide.

Coral reefs grow from two major chemical reactions: photosynthesis and calcification. Reef photosynthesis stores carbon, just as forests do on land, but calcification takes hydrogen carbonate from the water and stores some of the carbon in coral bodies, while releasing the rest. Measurements indicate the net effect is usually for coral reefs to be sources of slightly more carbon dioxide than they capture, although in most cases not by enough to alter the global carbon budget much.

Advertisement

In three papers published last year a team studying some of the world’s most unusual coral reefs show there is an important exception to this.

The Red Sea is almost entirely surrounded by deserts, making it subject to regular dust storms. Professor Hamish McGowan of the University of Queensland and co-authors found that 24 hours after dust falls on them the reefs of the gulf of Aqaba/Eilat, an arm of the Red Sea, experience a pulse of photosynthesis. This can pull enormous quantities of carbon dioxide out of the water over several days. Since this CO2 eventually gets replenished from the atmosphere, the net effect is to draw millions of tonnes of carbon out of the air, balancing the emissions of a small country. Even smoothed out on an annual basis, the reefs drew twice as much carbon dioxide from the atmosphere as the surrounding waters.

 “This process was previously thought to be impossible, but our research proves otherwise,” McGowan said in a statement.

McGowan told IFLScience another team studying the phenomenon confirmed the growth pulses are the result of nutrients in the dust supercharging both coral and their symbiotic photosynthesizing zooflagellates. This is not stopped by the fact the low nutrient density of the dust.

Advertisement

Most coral reefs do not have neighboring deserts, let alone surrounding ones, but McGowan is keen to explore whether those on Australia’s northwest coast experience similar dust-driven growth. Moreover, while the Caribbean is far from the Sahara, it is known to be fertilized by its dust. No one yet knows if the same goes for the reefs there. Until we know how widespread the phenomenon McGowan observed is, we can’t tell how important it is to the global climate budget. 

Coral reefs next to desert in the Gulf of Eilat/Gulf of Aqaba depending on your political affiliation

The proximity of these reefs to the desert makes them powerful carbon sinks, possibly uniquely in the world. Image Credit: UQ and Geological Survey Israel

 Coral reefs are frequently devastated by nutrient-rich runoff from floods. McGowan told IFLScience the volume of material in these cases is much greater, an example of having far too much of a good thing. If anyone is thinking of fertilizing reefs with dust as a form of carbon sequestration it would need to be done with great care.

The Red Sea reefs are known to tolerate temperatures at which other corals would bleach and die. Hopes have been expressed that transplanting these heat-adapted corals to other parts of the world could be a last-ditch way of saving reef ecosystems.

McGowan is interested in the possibility that the dust helps buffer the corals against heatstroke. However, in the course of their work, McGowan and colleagues identified another factor that contributes to the area’s reef’s resilience, and can’t be replicated elsewhere. “These reefs are growing in a hyperarid environment,” McGowan told IFLScience. “Dry air blows off the surrounding deserts and causes 3 meters of evaporation [a year], that has to be replaced through the Straits of Tiran.” This cools the surface waters so that the temperatures the corals experience are not as high as had been thought. Most other coral reefs are in much more humid areas, where evaporation is far lower.

Advertisement

The study is open access in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans with papers on other aspects of the research in Frontiers in Marine Science and the Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Japan firms see economy recovering to pre-COVID level in FY2022
  2. NBA-Unvaccinated players to face extensive COVID-19 curbs – memo
  3. Could Dragons On Westeros Fly? Aeronautical Engineering And Math Say They Could
  4. New Emperor Penguin Colony Spotted From Space Thanks To Their Poop

Source Link: When Desert Dust Hits Coral Reefs They Create Surprising Carbon Sinks

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Solar Systems 100 Times Smaller Than Ours Are Possible – Thanks To Rogue Planets
  • North Sea “Sinkites” Appear To Defy Rules Of Geology On Never-Before-Seen Scale
  • The Iberian Ribbed Newt Might Just Have The World’s Most Metal Defense Mechanism
  • There’s Only One Black Moon In 2025 And It’s Happening This Month
  • For First Time In Decades, Winter-Run Chinook Salmon Spotted In Upstream Californian River
  • JWST Shines New Light On 2500 Sources In Iconic Hubble Ultra Deep Field Image
  • Humans And Neanderthals Hooked Up Three Times. Here’s Where It Happened
  • What Happened To Percy Fawcett? The Explorer Who Went In Search “The Lost City Of Z”
  • COVID-19 And Flu Could “Reignite” Dormant Cancer Cells And Bring On New Tumors
  • Do Hair And Nails Really Grow Faster In Summer?
  • Wondrous And Worrying Sights: What Explorers Discovered At The Bottom Of The Great Blue Hole
  • What’s The Biggest Volcano In The World? It Depends How You’re Measuring
  • “Every Species On The Planet Self-Medicates In Some Way”: How Wild Animals Use Medicine
  • Deepest Complex Ecosystem Ever Discovered 10 Kilometers Below The Sea, 892-Kilometer “Megaflash” Lightning Sets New World Record, And Much More This Week
  • The Life And Death Of David Vetter, The Boy Who Lived His Whole Life In A Bubble
  • Time’s Arrow Within Glass Appears To Go Both Ways, Raising Huge Questions
  • World’s “Oldest Baby” Born From Embryo Frozen In 1994 In New World Record
  • What Can Spain’s “Tunnel Of Bones” Tell Us About The Fate Of Human Species On The Brink Of Extinction?
  • Rhino Horns Go Radioactive As Anti-Poaching Project Gets Off The Ground
  • Manta Rays Officially Get Third New Species – 15 Years After First Suspected
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version