ABSTRACT

Modern coral reefs are found in shallow, nutrient-poor waters within 30° north or south of the equator. Although they underlay only 0.1% of the ocean’s surface area, coral reefs provide food for millions of people, income from tourism, and other critical ecosystem services. Over the past 200 years, coral reefs have been changed dramatically from local human influences such as runoff, pollution, and overfishing. More recently, they have come under severe threat from climate change, which is having immediate effects on corals via rising temperatures and the increasing acidity of seawater.