Reefs that hosted higher numbers of heat-tolerant Durusdinium glynnii algae withstood warmer waters better than those with lower numbers.
looked at data from the Uva Island coral reef in Panama. The reef has experienced — and bounced back from — multiple heat waves between 1980 and 2018.
When researchers modeled future climate change scenarios, they found that the reefs hosting higher populations of D. glynniithat the world’s reefs will survive until 2050 at best.
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