Coral Bleaching and Climate Change

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Featured scientists: Christie Bahlai and Julia Perrone from Kent State University

Background:

Corals are animals that build coral reefs. Coral reefs are home to many species of animals – fish, sharks, sea turtles, and anemones all use corals for habitat! Corals are white, but they look brown and green because certain types of algae live inside them. Algae, like plants, use the sun’s energy to make food. The algae that live inside the corals’ cells are tiny and produce more sugars than they themselves need. The extra sugars become food for the corals. At the same time, the corals provide the algae a safe home. The algae and corals coexist in a relationship where each partner benefits the other, called a mutualism: these species do better together than they would alone.

When the water gets too warm, the algae can no longer live inside corals, so they leave. The corals then turn from green to white, called coral bleaching. Climate change has been causing the Earth’s air and oceans to get warmer. With warmer oceans, coral bleaching is becoming more widespread. If the water stays too warm, bleached corals will die without their algae mutualists.

A pacific coral reef with many corals

Carly observing a coral reef

Carly is a scientist who wants to study coral bleaching so she can help protect corals and coral reefs. One day while out on the reef, Carly observed an interesting pattern. Corals on one part of a reef were bleaching while corals on another part of the reef stayed healthy. She wondered, why some corals and their algae can still work together when the water is warm, while others cannot?

Ocean water that is closer to the shore (inshore) gets warmer than water that is further away (offshore). Perhaps corals and algae from inshore reefs have adapted to warm water. Carly wondered whether inshore corals are better able to work with their algae in warm water because they have adapted to these temperatures. If so, inshore corals and algae should bleach less often than offshore corals and algae. Carly designed an experiment to test this. She collected 15 corals from inshore and 15 from offshore reefs in the Florida Keys. She brought them into an aquarium lab for research. She cut each coral in half and put half of each coral into tanks with normal water and the other half into tanks with heaters. The normal water temperature was 27°C, which is a temperature that both inshore and offshore corals experience during the year. The warm water tanks were at 31°C, which is a temperature that inshore corals experience, but offshore corals have never previously experienced. Because of climate change, offshore corals may experience this warmer temperature in the future. After six weeks, she recorded the number of corals that bleached in each tank.

Scientific Question:  What is the effect of water temperature on corals from inshore and offshore reefs?

Scientific Data:

1) What is the hypothesis? Find the hypothesis in the Research Background and copy/paste it below. A hypothesis is a proposed explanation for an observation, which can then be tested with experimentation or other types of studies.

2) Look at your scientific question, and decide which variables might be most important to answer the scientific question.  Which did you choose?

Independent variable:
Dependent variable:

3) Make a graph based on your two variables, and add it as a screenshot below:

4. Looking at the graph you created, and identify any changes, trends, or differences you see in your graph.

Interpret the Data:

5. Make a claim that answers the scientific question.

6. What evidence was used to write your claim? Reference specific parts of the tables or graph.

7. Explain your reasoning and why the evidence supports your claim. Connect the data back to what you learned about climate change.

8. Did the data support the scientists’ hypothesis? Use evidence to explain why or why not. If you feel the data were inconclusive, explain why.

Your next steps as a scientist:

9. Your next steps as a scientist:Science is an ongoing process. What new question(s) should be investigated next to build on Carly’s research? What future data should be collected to answer your question(s)?


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This dataset and content is provided our by our friends at Data Nuggets.

Visit DataNuggets.org to see the original activity and additional materials