https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1312/12/10/1809

*Authors*
Joel M. P. Scofield, Emma L. Prime, Florita Flores, Andrea Severati,
Mathieu Mongin, Elodie Bougeot, Mark E. Baird, Andrew P. Negri and Greg G.
Qiao

https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse12101809

*10 October 2024*

*Abstract*
Coral bleaching is occurring more frequently as the climate changes, with
multiple mass mortality events recently recorded on the Great Barrier Reef.
Thermal stress coupled with high irradiance have previously been shown to
be primary causes for coral bleaching. Therefore, a reduction in either of
these pressures could reduce coral stress and eventual bleaching. Herein,
we report the early development of a novel technology capable of reducing
the amount of light entering a water body by ~20% in open ocean conditions.
This mono-particle “sun shield” consists of an ultra-thin monolayer
material and reflective calcium carbonate particles. The monolayer enables
spreading of the particles into a thin film across the water surface, with
only small amounts of material needed: 7.1 g/m2. A numerical modelling case
study of residence times and the build-up of reactive oxygen stress in
corals showed that the successful application of a stable film over the
Lizard Island reef flat could reduce the reactive oxygen stress to below
bleaching levels across approximately 1.5 km2 of reef area. With further
development, mono-particle films such as this have the potential to be
deployed over at-risk coral reefs at relatively small scales during
predicted heatwave conditions, potentially reducing the severity of
bleaching on coral reefs.

<https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1312/12/10/1809#>
<https://pub.mdpi-res.com/jmse/jmse-12-01809/article_deploy/html/images/jmse-12-01809-ag.png?1728563679>

Graphical Abstract

*Source: MDPI*

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