PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Coral reefs have stabilized Earth’s carbon cycle for the past 250 million years

New study shows ancient reefs have tuned Earth’s climate recovery for millennia

2025-12-01
(Press-News.org) Coral reefs have long been celebrated as biodiversity hotspots – but new research shows they have also played a much deeper role: conducting the rhythm of Earth’s carbon and climate cycles for more than 250 million years.

Published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), the study reveals that the rise and fall of shallow-water reef habitats have governed how quickly the planet recovered from major carbon dioxide (CO₂) shocks.

Researchers from the University of Sydney and Université Grenoble Alpes combined plate-tectonic reconstructions, global surface processes and climate simulations, with ecological modelling to reconstruct shallow-water carbonate production back to the Triassic Period. They found that the Earth system flips between two distinct modes that determine the pace of climate recovery.

Lead author Associate Professor Tristan Salles from the University of Sydney’s School of Geosciences said: “Reefs didn’t just respond to climate change – they helped set the tempo of recovery.”

Two modes of Earth’s carbon cycle

In one mode, when tropical shelves are extensive and reefs thrive, carbonate accumulates in shallow seas, reducing chemical exchange with the deep ocean. This weakens the biological pump – the process by which marine organisms draw down carbon – and slows the planet’s recovery from carbon shocks.

In the other mode, when reef space collapses due to tectonic or sea-level change, calcium and alkalinity build up in the ocean. Carbonate burial then shifts to the deep sea, stimulating nannoplankton productivity and accelerating climate recovery.

Reefs as climate regulators

The findings recast reefs and other shallow-water carbonate systems as active modulators of Earth’s buffering capacity rather than passive recorders of environmental change. This shifting balance between shallow- and deep-water carbonate burial also influenced the evolution of marine plankton and long-term ocean chemistry.

“These switches profoundly alter the biogeochemical equilibrium,” said co-lead author Dr Laurent Husson (CNRS - UGA).

“The big expansion of planktonic life happened exactly when shallow reefs were ‘turned down’ by the Earth system,” he said. Such changes modified the ocean’s biological pump and in turn, the climate and the speed at which it recovers from global perturbations.

This study suggests reefs have been central not only to marine biodiversity but also to the planet’s ability to stabilise climate.

What this means today

Although this study focuses on Earth’s deep past, it offers clear lessons for the future. Modern reef systems are declining rapidly due to warming and ocean acidification. If this trajectory mirrors ancient episodes of reef collapse, carbonate burial may shift from shallow reefs to the deep ocean – a habitability-limited mode. In principle, this could help draw down atmospheric carbon.

However, the very organisms that drive deep-sea carbonate burial – plankton and other calcifying species – are themselves increasingly threatened by acidifying oceans and continued CO₂ emissions. Any potential stabilising effect would therefore come only after severe and irreversible ecological loss.

Associate Professor Salles said: “From our perspective on the past 250 million years, we know the Earth system will eventually recover from the massive carbon disruption we are now entering. But this recovery will not occur on human timescales. Our study shows that geological recovery requires thousands to hundreds of thousands of years.”

DOWNLOAD the study, an animation and photos at this link.

INTERVIEWS

Associate Professor Tristan Salles | tristan.salles@sydney.edu.au | +61 451 462 502
Speaks English and French

MEDIA ENQUIRIES

Marcus Strom | marcus.strom@sydney.edu.au | +61 474 269 459

Outside of work hours, please call +61 2 8627 0246 (directs to a mobile number) or email media.office@sydney.edu.au. 

Research

Salles, T. et al ‘Carbonate burial regimes, the Meso-Cenozoic climate and nannoplankton expansion’ (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of North America 2025). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2516468122

Declaration

The authors declare no competing interests. Funding was received from the Australian Research Council and with support from the National Computational Infrastructure of the Australian Government.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Francisco José Sánchez-Sesma selected as 2026 Joyner Lecturer

2025-12-01
SSA and the Earthquake Engineering Research Institute (EERI) are pleased to announce that Francisco José Sánchez-Sesma, professor at the Universidad Autónoma de Mexico (UNAM), is the 2026 recipient of the William B. Joyner Lecture Award. Sánchez-Sesma will deliver the Joyner Lecture at the 2026 SSA Annual Meeting to be held 14-18 April 2026 in Pasadena, California and the 13th National Conference on Earthquake Engineering (13NCEE) to be held 13-17 July 2026 in Portland, Oregon. His Joyner Lecture, "Seismic ...

In recognition of World AIDS Day 2025, Gregory Folkers and Anthony Fauci reflect on progress made in antiretroviral treatments and prevention of HIV/AIDS, highlighting promising therapeutic developmen

2025-12-01
In recognition of World AIDS Day 2025, Gregory Folkers and Anthony Fauci reflect on progress made in antiretroviral treatments and prevention of HIV/AIDS, highlighting promising therapeutic developments and looking ahead to what is needed to end the AIDS epidemic   In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Medicine: https://plos.io/3JDHf5f Article title: Treatment and prevention of HIV/AIDS: Unfinished business Author countries: United States Funding: The authors received no ...

Treatment and prevention of HIV/AIDS: Unfinished business

2025-12-01
WASHINGTON – As the world marks World AIDS Day on Dec. 1, world-renowned infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci, MD, and his colleague Greg Folkers, MS, MPH, highlight advances made in the treatment and prevention of HIV that could finally end the pandemic, but caution, “History will judge us harshly should we squander this opportunity.” Writing in PLOS Medicine (“Treatment and prevention of HIV/AIDS: Unfinished business,” December 1, 2025), Fauci, Distinguished University ...

Drug that costs as little as 50 cents per day could save hospitals thousands, McMaster study finds

2025-12-01
A study led by McMaster University researchers shows that a widely available and inexpensive medication not only prevents potentially serious stomach bleeding in critically ill patients, but also saves hospitals thousands of dollars.   Published in JAMA Network Open on Dec. 1, 2025, the study is the first to demonstrate the economic benefits of the medication, pantoprazole, when prescribed in hospital for mechanically ventilated patients in the intensive care unit (ICU). These patients on life support are at high risk of ...

Health risks of air pollution from stubble burning poorly understood in various parts of Punjab, India

2025-12-01
In Punjab, India, paddy stubble burning is a widespread agricultural practice that contributes to seasonal air pollution in the region and beyond. However, the extent to which residents recognize its impact on their own environment and health or in the highly populated areas of Delhi National Capital Region (NCR) has remained unclear. To address this gap, the Aakash Project (led by researchers from Hokkaido University in collaboration with Indian research partners) conducted interviews with 2,202 households across 22 districts in Punjab.   Urban air pollution is recognized, but local sources are undervalued About 46% ...

How fast you can walk before hip surgery may determine how well you recover

2025-12-01
Fukuoka, Japan—Total hip arthroplasty (hip replacement) is a common treatment for hip osteoarthritis, a degenerative joint disease caused by cartilage in the hip joint wearing down. However, clinical outcomes vary between patients, and the best timing for surgery remains unclear. Now, researchers at Kyushu University have identified that pre-surgery walking speed is a strong predictor of post-surgery outcomes. In a study published on 26 November in The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, they found that patients ...

Roadmap for reducing, reusing, and recycling in space

2025-12-01
Every time a rocket is launched, tons of valuable materials are lost, and huge amounts of greenhouse gases and ozone-depleting chemicals are released into the atmosphere. Publishing December 1 in the Cell Press journal Chem Circularity, sustainability and space scientists discuss how the principles of reducing, reusing, and recycling could be applied to satellites and spacecraft—from design and manufacturing to in-orbit repair and end-of-life repurposing.  “As space activity ...

Long-term HIV control: Could this combination therapy be the key?

2025-12-01
A new study from UC San Francisco shows it may be possible to control HIV without long-term antiviral treatment — an advance that points the way toward a possible cure for a disease that affects 40 million people around the world.  Treatment with a combination of experimental immunotherapy agents enabled seven out of 10 participants to keep the virus at low levels for many months after going off antiretroviral therapy (ART).  The results appear on Dec. 1, World AIDS Day, in Nature.  The trial, which relied on a collaboration with ...

Home hospital care demonstrates success in rural communities

2025-12-01
One in five people in the United States live in a rural area. Patients in rural communities often struggle to access care because of travel difficulties, high costs and limited resources, leading to worse medical outcomes. With over 150 rural hospital closures since 2010, innovative approaches to care delivery in rural areas are needed. In a new study by investigators from Mass General Brigham and Ariadne Labs, in collaboration with colleagues at rural U.S. and Canadian health centers, researchers found that hospital-level care at home is feasible for patients living in rural areas with acute conditions ...

Hospital-level care at home for adults living in rural settings

2025-12-01
About The Study: In this randomized clinical trial of home hospital care in rural settings, cost and readmission were unchanged while patient activity and experience improved. Late transfer home likely attenuated the intervention’s effect.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, David M. Levine, MD, MPH, MA, email dmlevine@bwh.harvard.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.45712) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Bluey’s dad offered professorial chair in archaeology at Griffith University

Beyond small data limitations: Transfer learning-enabled framework for predicting mechanical properties of aluminum matrix composites

Unveiling non-thermal catalytic origin of direct current-promoted catalysis for energy-efficient transformation of greenhouse gases to valuable chemicals

Chronic breathlessness emerging as a hidden strain on hospitals

Paleontologists find first fossil bee nests made inside fossil bones

These fossils were the perfect home for ancient baby bees

Not everyone reads the room the same. A new study examines why.

New research identifies linked energy, immune and vascular changes in ME/CFS

Concurrent frailty + depression likely boost dementia risk in older people

Living in substandard housing linked to kids’ missed schooling and poor grades

Little awareness of medical + psychological complexities of steroid cream withdrawal

Eight in 10 trusts caring for emergency department patients in corridors, finds BMJ investigation

NASA’s Webb telescope finds bizarre atmosphere on a lemon-shaped exoplanet

The gut bacteria that put the brakes on weight gain in mice

Exploring how patients feel about AI transcription

Category ‘6’ tropical cyclone hot spots are growing

Video: Drivers struggle to multitask when using dashboard touch screens, study finds

SLU research shows surge in alcohol-related liver disease driving ‘deaths of despair’

Rising heat reshapes how microbes break down microplastics, new review finds

Roots reveal a hidden carbon pathway in maize plants

Membrane magic: FAMU-FSU researchers repurpose fuel cells membranes for new applications

UN Member States pledge to increase access to diagnosis and inhaled medicines for the 480 million people living with COPD

Combination therapy shows potential to treat pediatric brain cancer ATRT

Study links seabird nesting to shark turf wars in Hawai‘i

Legal sports betting linked to sharp increases in violent crime, study finds

Breakthrough AI from NYUAD speeds up discovery of life-supporting microbes

New Eva Mayr-Stihl Foundation funding initiative boosts research at University of Freiburg on adaptation of forests to global change

The perfect plastic? Plant-based, fully saltwater degradable, zero microplastics

Bias in data may be blocking AI’s potential to combat antibiotic resistance

Article-level metrics would provide more recognition to most researchers than journal-level metrics

[Press-News.org] Coral reefs have stabilized Earth’s carbon cycle for the past 250 million years
New study shows ancient reefs have tuned Earth’s climate recovery for millennia