Ecological memory modifies the cumulative impact of recurrent climate extremes

This dataset supports the 2018 Nature Climate Change publication by Terry Hughes, James Kerry, Sean Connolly (lead authors) and 10 co-authors, entitled 'Ecological memory modifies the cumulative impact of recurrent climate extremes'. It is comprised of one data file as an Excel .csv in long form:

(1) 2016-2017 data - gives (in long format) the aerial scores and Degree Heating Weeks for reefs surveyed in 2016 (1135 reefs) and in 2017 (742 reefs)

    Data Record Details
    Data record related to this publication Ecological memory modifies the cumulative impact of recurrent climate extremes
    Data Publication title Ecological memory modifies the cumulative impact of recurrent climate extremes
  • Description

    This dataset supports the 2018 Nature Climate Change publication by Terry Hughes, James Kerry, Sean Connolly (lead authors) and 10 co-authors, entitled 'Ecological memory modifies the cumulative impact of recurrent climate extremes'. It is comprised of one data file as an Excel .csv in long form:

    (1) 2016-2017 data - gives (in long format) the aerial scores and Degree Heating Weeks for reefs surveyed in 2016 (1135 reefs) and in 2017 (742 reefs)

  • Other Descriptors
    • Descriptor

      This dataset supports the 2018 Nature Climate Change publication by Terry Hughes, James Kerry, Sean Connolly (lead authors) and 10 co-authors, entitled 'Ecological memory modifies the cumulative impact of recurrent climate extremes'. It is comprised of one data file as an Excel .csv in long form:

      (1) 2016-2017 data - Aerial surveys were conducted in March and April 2016, and in March 2017, to measure the geographic extent and severity of bleaching on the Great Barrier Reef. 1,135 individual reef scores are given for 2016 and 742 for 2017. They fall in to one of five bleaching categories: (0) less than 1% of corals bleached, (1) 1-10%, (2) 10-30%, (3) 30-60%, and (4) more than 60% of corals bleached. The accuracy of the aerial scores was ground-truthed in 2016 by measuring the extent of bleaching underwater on 104 reefs, also during March/April 2016.

      The dataset also contains the Degree Heating Weeks (heat stress metric) from the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) for year-to-date heat stress based on the date a reef was surveyed.

      Finally, each reef was assigned to one of three categories: North, Central or South, denoting is broad latitudinal position on the Great Barrier Reef. This clustering was used in some analyses.

    • Descriptor type Full
  • Data type dataset
  • Keywords
    • ecological memory
    • recurrent heatwaves
    • coral reefs
    • disturbance regimes
    • ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
  • Funding source
  • Research grant(s)/Scheme name(s)
    • -
  • Research themes
    Tropical Ecosystems, Conservation and Climate Change
    FoR Codes (*)
    SEO Codes
    Specify spatial or temporal setting of the data
    Temporal (time) coverage
  • Start Date 2016/03/01
  • End Date 2017/03/31
  • Time Period
    Spatial (location) coverage
  • Locations
    • Great Barrier Reef
    Data Locations

    Type Location Notes
    Attachment 2016-2017data.csv
    The Data Manager is: Terence Hughes
    College or Centre ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
    Access conditions Open: free access under license
  • Alternative access conditions
  • Data record size 1 CSV file: 126 KB
  • Related publications
      Name Hughes, Terry. P., Kerry, James T., Connolly, Sean R., Baird, Andrew H., Eakin, C. Mark, Heron, Scott F., Hoey, Andrew S., Hoogenboom, Mia O, Jacobson, Mizue, Liu, Gang, Pratchett, Morgan S., Skirving, Wiliam and Torda, Gergely (2018). Ecological memory modifies the cumulative impact of recurrent climate extremes. Nature Climate Change, 9:40-43.
    • URL https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-018-0351-2
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    Citation Hughes, Terence; Kerry, James (2018): Ecological memory modifies the cumulative impact of recurrent climate extremes. James Cook University. https://doi.org/10.25903/5beb6e4173f88