GBRMPA

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Chapter 10: Vulnerability of reef-building corals on the Great Barrier Reef to climate change

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Abstract

Reef-building corals (Order Scleractinia Class Anthozoa) form extensive skeletons of calcium carbonate (limestone), depositing enough material over time to form vast reef structures that may be easily seen from space. The majority of reef-building corals are hard (stony) scleractinian corals. Many octocorals (especially soft corals in the family Alcyoniidae and the blue coral Heliopora) and some hydrozoan corals (such as Millepora) also contribute to reef-building. Corals form the framework of reef structures, while other organisms such as calcareous algae (especially red coralline algae) play a key role in cementing and consolidating the reef framework. This chapter focuses on the vulnerability of reef-building corals to climate change. The implications of climate change for macroalgae are covered in chapter 7 and a broader treatment of reef processes is provided in chapter 17.

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Great Barrier Reef (Qld.)-Climate

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Climate change and the Great Barrier Reef: a vulnerability assessment

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Book: Climate change and the Great Barrier Reef: a vulnerability assessment

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