Coral is important for biodiversity and the growth of fish populations, so maintaining coral reefs is important. Many coral islands are small with low elevation above sea level. Thus they are at threat from storms and
rising sea levels. Through chemical and physical changes humans can cause significant harm to reef systems and slow the creation of coral island chains. Reefs grow in shallow, warm, nutrient-poor waters where they are not outcompeted by
phytoplankton. By adding fertilizers into the water runoff, phytoplankton populations can explode and choke out coral reef systems. Adding too many sediments can cause a similar problem by blocking out the sun, starving the
zooxanthellae that live on coral causing it to undergo a process known as
coral bleaching. The ocean's acidity is also a factor. Coral is made of calcium carbonate and is dissolved by carbonic acid. With the increase in carbon dioxide from
combustion reactions in the atmosphere through precipitation, carbon dioxide mixes with water and forms
carbonic acid, raising the ocean's acidity which slows coral growth. Although low islands may have fewer potential habitats than high islands, thus lower species diversity, studies of both types of islands in
Palau found that species diversity, at least in the waters around the island, is more affected by island size than by its origin. ==Climate and habitability==