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"The common denominator is more on a planetary scale," Brainard said. "There's more heat on the planet this year in the first nine months than any other year." He said bleaching hadn't even been observed in corals until 20 years ago. "Then with these El Nino events we started seeing more bleaching. And now these are occurring
-- this is one of the symptoms of global warming," he said. "Even these small events, I think what they indicate is the whole scale is shifting." What the Hawaii corals experienced was significantly more mild than Southeast Asia. But being bleached could hurt the corals over time. Heidi Schuttenberg, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's research coordinator for the monument, predicted the bleached corals would be sick by the time scientists return for another research trip next year. "When corals are bleaching, they're essentially starving," Schuttenberg said. "They're very weak so even if they survive their event, they're much more vulnerable to disease, and they have much lower reproductive capacity."
[Associated
Press;
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