“We find that the skeleton is immediately overgrown by rapid growth of algae and bacteria,” said co-author Bill Leggat, an associate professor at the U.K.’s University of Newcastle. By CT scanning the coral skeleton, Leggat said, the team found that “this process is devastating not just for the animal tissue, but also for the skeleton that is left behind, which is rapidly eroded and weakened.”

Laura Richardson at the U.K.-based Bangor University’s School of Ocean Sciences—who was not involved in the study—told BBC News that the team’s significant discovery was “the rapidity with which the reef skeleton breaks down when you have these severe heatwaves.”

“Given that the degradation of coral reefs will result in the collapse of ecosystem services that sustain over half a billion people, we urgently need actions both globally and locally that protect and conserve these truly wonderful places.”
—Tracy Ainsworth, study co-author

They are the first researchers, as Richardson noted, to document that such events are causing “almost instant mortality of corals.”

“Climate scientists talk about ‘unknown unknowns’—impacts that we haven’t anticipated from existing knowledge and experience,” said study co-author Scott Heron of Australia’s James Cook University. “This discovery fits into this category.”

“As we begin now to understand this impact,” Heron added, “the question is how many more of these ‘unknown unknowns’ might there still be that could bring faster and greater damage to coral reefs from climate change.”

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Though the study generated alarm, the researchers expressed hope that it will spur public outcry for policymakers to pursue bolder efforts to combat the climate crisis—and, specifically, protect coral reefs, particularly considering the anticipated consequences of inaction.

PBS News Hour reported that “without the option to recover, the world may start seeing corals die off faster than expected. And the death of corals would come with a steep cost for humans: flood protection that’s worth tens of millions in the U.S. alone, plus an estimated value of almost $30 billion each year globally in tourism, fishing, and other benefits.”

“Across the globe coral reefs are still a source of inspiration and awe of the natural world, as well as being critically important to the communities that rely upon them,” said Ainsworth. “Given that the degradation of coral reefs will result in the collapse of ecosystem services that sustain over half a billion people, we urgently need actions both globally and locally that protect and conserve these truly wonderful places.”