Yahoo – AFP,
Kerry Sheridan, 30 June 2015
![]() |
Diving
instructor Patti Gross plants coral and scrubs algae off coral as part of a
gardening project at Alligator Reef in the Florida Keys on May 23, 2015
(AFP
Photo/David Gross)
|
Miami (AFP)
- Coral reefs are fragile and in danger worldwide, but a growing movement to
restore them is based on the science of breaking off pieces in order to grow
more, known as coral gardening.
It works
like this: marine biologists cut off the tips of live branching corals, hang
the pieces on man-made underwater trees where they grow, and later
"outplant" them on real reefs on the ocean floor.
After years
of trial and error, scientists in Florida are now bringing their methods to the
public -- via diving trips, ecotourism outings and summer camps for teens -- to
counter the harmful effects of climate change, pollution and industrial
development.
"It is
just like if you had a rosebush in your garden. As you prune that rosebush
back, it grows back healthier, bushier, a little more lively," explains
Stephanie Schopmeyer, senior research associate at the University of Miami
Rosenstiel School of Marine Science, which runs a program called Rescue a Reef
that allows citizen scientists to join the project.
"Corals
that are fragmented actually grow back faster and with more branches," she
said.
On a recent
outing, Schopmeyer and about a dozen other divers and snorkelers spent a sunny
spring morning on the water, traveling first by boat to an underwater nursery
in Biscayne Bay where they scrubbed algae off the man-made trees on which
Staghorn corals hang, and later to another area where they planted nursery-grown
bits of coral on an existing reef.
Certified
scuba divers did the underwater work, while a handful of tourists and students
helped make cookies -- small discs on which they use epoxy to affix
finger-sized pieces of coral. Then, the volunteers snorkeled, watching the
divers nail their handiwork on the ocean floor.
Nicole
Besemer, a graduate student at the University of Miami, says she was surprised
to learn that corals can survive and thrive after being cut and nailed in a new
place.
"As a
diver in south Florida, I want to make sure that my reefs are as healthy as they
can be," Besemer says.
"I
know they are not what they used to be."
Reefs in
danger
Corals may
look like rocks or plants but they are actually animals in the same family as
jellyfish and anemones. Each individual coral is called a polyp, and the reef
grows as polyps grow copies of themselves. Most corals reproduce by releasing
eggs and sperm into the water.
Coral reefs
are important because they provide habitat and food for fish, turtles,
seahorses, sea urchins and other creatures.
But the
reefs are struggling, with their numbers down 50-95 percent in some parts of
the world.
Pollution
cuts off their light and food supply, overfishing removes the creatures that
keep them clean and healthy, development and dredging cause sediment to smother
them, and ocean acidification makes it harder for them to grow.
Storms can
also kill them. Diego Lirman, an associate professor of marine biology and
ecology at the University of Miami, did his dissertation some 30 years ago on
the impact of hurricanes on a place nearby called Elkhorn Reef.
Now, he
says, there are no Elkhorn corals left there.
"It
got to the point where I was getting tired of just watching things die and
learning about them in the process. I wanted to be able to do something to
recover them," says Lirman.
He credits
scientists in nations like Israel, Fiji, Indonesia and the Philippines for
coming up with the coral gardening techniques that Florida researchers are now
using, and says sharing knowledge across borders helped everyone perfect their
techniques.
"We
are now reaching ecologically meaningful scales," Lirman says.
"We
realized it is all about the numbers -- the numbers you can grow, the numbers
you can put back."
Explosive
growth
A major
part of the movement in Florida and the Caribbean is led by the Coral
Restoration Foundation (CRF), which employs about 10 staff and leads an army of
volunteers on regular expeditions.
CRF and the
University of Miami's reef programs were initially funded in large part by the
Recovery Act of 2009, a White House initiative to kickstart the US economy
following the global financial crisis. Donations have poured in as well.
![]() |
Volunteers
prepare to make a dive to plant coral as part of the University of
Miami
Rosentiel School’s Rescue a Reef program, in Biscayne Bay, Forida
on May 23,
2015 (AFP Photo/Kerry Sheridan)
|
"We
are kind of at the explosive growth stage," says CRF president Ken
Nedimyer.
A few years
ago, the foundation planted a few thousand corals per year. Now they have 500
underwater trees in Florida that are growing 40,000-50,000 corals at any one
time, he says.
For those
who want special training, the Professional Association of Diving Instructors
(PADI) offers courses and certifications in coral reef restoration.
Scuba
divers must be aged 14 or older, and must be able to control their buoyancy
underwater so as not to harm the reefs, says Patti Gross, a master diving
instructor with PADI who says she has certified around 250 people in coral
restoration in the past four years.
"This
is way harder than it appears on land," she says.
"But
it is very rewarding in the end."



No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.