High sea surface temperatures were a prerequisite for the development and expansion of the Great Barrier Reef
High sea surface temperatures were a prerequisite for the development and expansion of the Great Barrier Reef
The Great Barrier Reef is the largest reef system in the modern ocean. To date, the influence of temperature on the origin and long-term evolution of the Great Barrier Reef remains enigmatic. Here, we present a 900–thousand year TEX86H-derived temperature proxy record from Ocean Drilling Program Site 820 in the Coral Sea. It demonstrates that the onset of reef growth on the outer shelf was preceded by a rise in summer temperature from ~26° to ~28°C at around 700 thousand years ago (marine isotope stage 17). This approximately 2°C rise in summer sea surface temperatures (SSTs) likely resulted in higher carbonate production rates, which were crucial for the formation of the Great Barrier Reef. Subsequently, reconstructed SSTs remained sufficiently warm for the Great Barrier Reef to thrive and evolve continuously. The evolution of the Great Barrier Reef, therefore, appears to be closely linked to SSTs.
Petrick, Benjamin
f40bc692-c5fe-45ba-8024-b9122e3e3287
Reuning, Lars
245902d4-be81-4a92-989d-ad3e22e4e7fd
Auderset, Alexandra
a6054a25-7c59-49fe-a2cd-62c1d3f3c8b3
Pfeiffer, Miriam
55f8e166-8a28-4789-9587-e28b2c5efc9a
Auer, Gerald
e0c0fee2-91b3-4e9c-90b6-88a7183c1232
Schwark, Lorenz
66e3fd83-4ec1-460d-85b7-36ef0c6dc794
4 December 2024
Petrick, Benjamin
f40bc692-c5fe-45ba-8024-b9122e3e3287
Reuning, Lars
245902d4-be81-4a92-989d-ad3e22e4e7fd
Auderset, Alexandra
a6054a25-7c59-49fe-a2cd-62c1d3f3c8b3
Pfeiffer, Miriam
55f8e166-8a28-4789-9587-e28b2c5efc9a
Auer, Gerald
e0c0fee2-91b3-4e9c-90b6-88a7183c1232
Schwark, Lorenz
66e3fd83-4ec1-460d-85b7-36ef0c6dc794
Petrick, Benjamin, Reuning, Lars, Auderset, Alexandra, Pfeiffer, Miriam, Auer, Gerald and Schwark, Lorenz
(2024)
High sea surface temperatures were a prerequisite for the development and expansion of the Great Barrier Reef.
Science Advances, 10 (49).
(doi:10.1126/sciadv.ado2058).
Abstract
The Great Barrier Reef is the largest reef system in the modern ocean. To date, the influence of temperature on the origin and long-term evolution of the Great Barrier Reef remains enigmatic. Here, we present a 900–thousand year TEX86H-derived temperature proxy record from Ocean Drilling Program Site 820 in the Coral Sea. It demonstrates that the onset of reef growth on the outer shelf was preceded by a rise in summer temperature from ~26° to ~28°C at around 700 thousand years ago (marine isotope stage 17). This approximately 2°C rise in summer sea surface temperatures (SSTs) likely resulted in higher carbonate production rates, which were crucial for the formation of the Great Barrier Reef. Subsequently, reconstructed SSTs remained sufficiently warm for the Great Barrier Reef to thrive and evolve continuously. The evolution of the Great Barrier Reef, therefore, appears to be closely linked to SSTs.
Text
sciadv.ado2058
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 31 October 2024
Published date: 4 December 2024
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 500852
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500852
ISSN: 2375-2548
PURE UUID: 8f518771-0cb7-4f63-a45a-32479b1fc105
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 14 May 2025 16:32
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:38
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Benjamin Petrick
Author:
Lars Reuning
Author:
Alexandra Auderset
Author:
Miriam Pfeiffer
Author:
Gerald Auer
Author:
Lorenz Schwark
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics