Anomalously high water temperatures in the Florida waters and in the Bahamas

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Message from NOAA's Coral Reef Watch Program:

Our satellite data show that sea surface temperature (SST) along the Florida coast and in the Keys has taken a dramatic upturn since mid-May (2010), with this year seeing first an extreme cold outbreak earlier this year and now an extremely warm spring season. (See the web pages linked from below and the following text for details.)

SST in the region increased significantly in mid-May with a dramatic increase near 2ºC over several days at some locations. Another SST hike started in early June and continues along the Florida coast, in the Keys, and also in the Bahamas. These two events pushed the SST in the region way above what we have seen in our satellite data from the past 10 years for the region. At many locations, SSTs are now more than 1ºC above the highest SSTs observed at this time of the year. At some locations, SST has already reached a level that is not usually reached until late July to early August and exceeds the thresholds for developing coral bleaching. In fact, all of our Florida reef pixels currently are at Bleaching Watch or Bleaching Warning status. Most pixels through the Greater and Lesser Antilles and around the Caribbean coast of South and Central America are at Bleaching Watch as well.

Surface wind speed has been low during the past few days in the region. It may accelerate the already significant warming, if persistent.

This summer is most likely a stressful bleaching season for the corals along the Florida coast, in the Keys, and in the Bahamas. The forecasted active hurricane season may relieve the bleaching thermal stress as the hurricanes did in 2005, but this will depend on storm tracks.

Anomalously warm conditions have existed across most the Caribbean since January and our Outlook product shows potential for strong warming this year in the Caribbean and Western Pacific.

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Current bleaching alert areas:
http://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov/satellite/baa/current/crw_optw_bleachingalertarea_caribbean.gif

Time series graphs and data of the Virtual Stations in Florida:
http://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov/satellite/virtual_stations/florida_virtualstations.html

A sample multi-year time series graph of Palm Beach, Florida.
http://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov/satellite/virtual_stations/graphs/vs_multiyear_exp_FL15_PalmBeach.png

Rate of SST increase during the past three weeks:
http://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov/satellite/ssttrends/ssttrend21d/ssttrend21days_20100617_caribbean.gif

Doldrums wind condition in the region:
http://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov/satellite/ssttrends/ssttrend21d/ssttrend21days_20100617_caribbean.gif

SST anomaly:
http://www.osdpd.noaa.gov/data/sst/anomaly/anomwcurrent.gif

Bleaching Outlook:
http://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov/satellite/bleachingoutlook/index.html

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All of above pages are on Coral Reef Watch's website:
http://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov/
 
I noticed the water was really warm with a sharp 12-14 degree thermocline at 40 ft when diving last week (others have reported the same). I haven't experienced this here in a couple hundred dives over the last 10 years or so. Those warm surface temps are bed for the hurricanes as well when they get into the gulf.
 
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