Published on: July 25, 2025

CORAL DECLINE IN LAKSHADWEEP

CORAL DECLINE IN LAKSHADWEEP

NEWS

  • A 24-year study (1998–2022) by the Nature Conservation Foundation reveals a 50% reduction in coral cover in Lakshadweep.
  • Published in Diversity and Distributions, the study analyzed reefs across Agatti, Kadmat, and Kavaratti atolls.

HIGHLIGHTS

Cause: Repeated Marine Heatwaves

  • Coral decline is largely due to repeated marine heatwaves, intensified by climate change and El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events (1998, 2010, 2016).
  • Coral cover dropped from 37.24% to 19.6% over 24 years.

Role of Local Conditions

  • Reef responses varied based on:
    • Wave exposure
    • Coral depth
    • Bleaching frequency
  • Recovery improved only after 6 years of heatwave-free periods, showing time is critical.

Predictive Framework Introduced

  • Corals showed six distinct response clusters based on:
    • Heatwave impact
    • Recovery rate
    • Reef exposure (sheltered vs. exposed)
    • Depth
  • These clusters help predict future reef vulnerability or resilience.

 Climate Warning

  • Researchers stress that global climate action is critical.
  • Local restoration alone cannot prevent reef loss.
  • Without reduced heatwave frequency, tropical reefs face irreversible damage.