SUMMER HEAT QUANTIFIED: Mission: Iconic Reefs surveys impact to corals
A team of researchers from NOAA's Mission: Iconic Reefs program and partners from Mote Marine Laboratory & Aquarium and the Coral Restoration Foundation completed a scientific mission February 14, 2024 to quantify the impact of 2023's marine heat wave on corals in Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Data from the research cruise will help NOAA and partners understand the extent of the record-high marine temperatures from the summer of 2023 on both wild and restored corals — which are nursery-raised and out-planted on the reef — and inform future restoration strategies to increase coral resilience.
Media resources from the research cruise are included here:
Mission: Iconic Reefs field team member Cate Gelston, co-lead scientist on the assessment cruise, retrieves a transect tape after completing an outplant coral health assessment survey. Ben Edmonds/NOAA.Mission: Iconic Reefs field team member Cate Gelston, co-lead scientist on the assessment cruise, surveys the fate of coral out-plants. Ben Edmonds/NOAA.Mission: Iconic Reefs field team member Cate Gelston, co-lead scientist on the assessment cruise, and Data Manager Grace Hanson, prepare a GPS unit in advance of outplant health assessment surveys. Ben Edmonds/NOAA.Mission: Iconic Reefs field team member Jamie Emm, co-lead scientist on the assessment cruise, takes a photo of Orbicella faveolata corals that were out-planted on the reef. These slow-growing corals fared better than fast-growing acroporids. Ben Edmonds/NOAA.The Mission: Iconic Reefs team spent a week aboard the M/V Makai, conducting survey dives over coral out-plant sites. Ben Edmonds/NOAA.
Animation illustrates unprecedented bleaching alerts between May and October 2023.