Poster's note: missed this one!

Baird ME, Green R, Lowe R, Mongin M, Bougeot E (2020)

Optimising cool-water injections to reduce thermal stress on coral reefs of
the Great Barrier Reef. PLoS ONE 15(10): e0239978.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0239978

Editor: Anderson B. Mayfield, Living Oceans Foundation, TAIWAN

Published: October 20, 2020

Coral bleaching driven by ocean warming is one of the most visible
ecological impacts of climate change and perhaps the greatest threat to the
persistence of reefs in the coming decades. In the absence of returning
atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations to those compatible with ocean
temperatures below the mass coral bleaching temperature thresholds, the
most straightforward means to reduce thermal-stress induced bleaching is to
cool water at the seabed. The feasibility of reducing the seabed
temperature through cool-water injections is considered first by analysing
the feasibility of doing so on 19 reefs with differing physical
environments using a simple residence time metric in 200 m resolution
hydrodynamic model configurations. We then concentrate on the reefs around
Lizard Island, the most promising candidate of the 19 locations, and
develop a 40 m hydrodynamic model to investigate the effect of the
injection of cool water at differing volumetric rates. Injecting 27°C
seawater at a rate of 5 m3 s−1 at 4 sites in early 2017 cooled 97 ha of the
reef by 0.15°C or more. The power required to pump 5 m3 s−1 through a set
of pipes over a distance of 3 km from a nearby channel is ∼466 kW. This
power applied at 4 sites for 3 months achieves a 2 Degree Heating Weeks
(DHWs) reduction on 97 ha of reef. A more precise energy costing will
require further expert engineering design of the pumping equipment and
energy sources. Even for the most physically favourable reefs, cool-water
transported through pipes and injected at a reef site is energy expensive
and cannot be scaled up to any meaningful fraction of the 3,100 reefs of
the GBR. Should priority be given to reducing thermal stress on one or a
few high value reefs, this paper provides a framework to identify the most
promising sites.

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