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Marine heatwave decimates fire coral populations in the Caribbean

Nature and the biosphere

November 17, 2025

  • Date (DD-MM-YYYY)

    25-11-2025 to 25-02-2027

    Available on-demand until 25th February 2027

  • Cost

    Subscription required

  • Education type

    Publication

  • CPD subtype

    On-demand

Description

Marine heatwaves (MHW) are common destructive events affecting coral reefs. After decades of degradation, the shallow reefs of the United States Virgin Islands have been depleted of scleractinian corals, leaving abundant colonies of the hydrozoan fire coral Millepora dominating the coral community. This dominance ended in 2024 after 84% of Millepora colonies over 43 km of shore were killed by a MHW that brought the hottest October in the 36 y since monitoring began. In August 2024, dead Millepora were rare on these reefs, but by March 2025, severe bleaching created a fire coral graveyard. Decimation of the fire coral biotope shows that these short-term coral winners are unlikely to be future reef builders.

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