Global Reef Pages Contact the NESDIS coral reef team: |
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This map is from Easter Island Homepage, created by University of Texas Coral reefs are
necessities for millions of animals and plant species that we rely on for
food. Coral reefs are important to our future because they are one
of the earth's most diverse living ecosystems, they are full of new and
undiscovered biomedical resources and they are protection for coastal communities
from storms, wave damage and erosion. Coral reefs also attract hundreds
of thousands of divers, snorkelers, and other tourists to tropical coasts
every year. This recreation and travel supports a significant tourism
industry dependent on clean water and healthy coral reefs. Corals
live on the upper edge of their temperature tolerance. Abnormally
high water temperatures combined with low winds and still water can cause
destructive bleaching of coral reefs. NOAA monitors this threat with satellite-derived
Sea
Surface Temperature (SST), Ocean Surface Winds,HotSpots
(regions of very high SST), Degree Heating Weeks
(accumulations of HotSpots), and on-site
buoys
This page was created by Tyre Patterson, a NOAA intern,July 2000
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