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Considerations for determining warm-water coral reef tipping points

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posted on 2025-03-23, 22:17 authored by P Pearce-Kelly, AH Altieri, JF Bruno, Christopher CornwallChristopher Cornwall, M McField, AI Muñiz-Castillo, J Rocha, RO Setter, C Sheppard, RM Roman-Cuesta, C Yesson
Warm-water coral reefs are facing unprecedented human-driven threats to their continued existence as biodiverse functional ecosystems upon which hundreds of millions of people rely. These impacts may drive coral ecosystems past critical thresholds, beyond which the system reorganises, often abruptly and potentially irreversibly; this is what the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC, 2022) define as a tipping point. Determining tipping point thresholds for coral reef ecosystems requires a robust assessment of multiple stressors and their interactive effects. In this perspective piece, we draw upon the recent global tipping point revision initiative (Lenton et al., 2023a) and a literature search to identify and summarise the diverse range of interacting stressors that need to be considered for determining tipping point thresholds for warm-water coral reef ecosystems. Considering observed and projected stressor impacts, we endorse the global tipping point revision's conclusion of a global mean surface temperature (relative to pre-industrial) tipping point threshold of 1.2 °C (range 1-1.5 °C) and the long-term impacts of atmospheric CO2 concentrations above 350 ppm, while acknowledging that comprehensive assessment of stressors, including ocean warming response dynamics, overshoot, and cascading impacts, have yet to be sufficiently realised. These tipping point thresholds have already been exceeded, and therefore these systems are in an overshoot state and are reliant on policy actions to bring stressor levels back within tipping point limits. A fuller assessment of interacting stressors is likely to further lower the tipping point thresholds in most cases. Uncertainties around tipping points for such crucially important ecosystems underline the imperative of robust assessment and, in the case of knowledge gaps, employing a precautionary principle favouring lower-range tipping point values.

History

Preferred citation

Pearce-Kelly, P., Altieri, A. H., Bruno, J. F., Cornwall, C. E., McField, M., Muñiz-Castillo, A. I., Rocha, J., Setter, R. O., Sheppard, C., Roman-Cuesta, R. M. & Yesson, C. (2025). Considerations for determining warm-water coral reef tipping points. Earth System Dynamics, 16(1), 275-292. https://doi.org/10.5194/esd-16-275-2025

Journal title

Earth System Dynamics

Volume

16

Issue

1

Publication date

2025-02-07

Pagination

275-292

Publisher

Copernicus GmbH

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2025-02-07

ISSN

2190-4979

eISSN

2190-4987

Language

en

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