- We decided to make a diving cruise to explore the reefs of Saint John during the coldest period of the year in the Red Sea. The water temperature is 23 degrees Celsius. It's 5 degrees below the temperature at the beginning of the summer and 7 degrees lower than in autumn. Because the fresh water, we hope to take pictures of silky or oceanic sharks. After a day of diving on the sites of Saint John which are certainly the most beautiful coral reefs in the Red Sea, the storm rages. It is accompanied by storms of exceptional violence. Underwater visibility is very poor due to strong winds that create large waves. The boat must hide to get protection against the winds. It becomes impossible to take photos of scenery scenes because the poor visibility; sharks will remain a dream. Too bad, we must adapt our work. During the rest of the trip, we focus our work on the portraits and behaviors of fish. We are always in search of colors. We therefore prefer the colorful fish. After several dives, we notice that the sandy coves where the boat is anchored are full of life that we do not know. These small fish and crustaceans are not very colorful but the behaviors we observe are sufficiently interesting and unusual to take the time to photograph them. For each image, we must be patient because the fish are hiding in their burrows at the slightest vibration or the slightest shadow on the sandy bottom. A work of patience and careful that will be rewarded by some beautiful shots.
Thứ Tư, 30 tháng 11, 2011
Top 10 coral species at most risk of extinction
10 of the world’s most at risk coral species have been identified by the EDGE Coral Reefs project, as conservationists unveil plans to save coral reefs from extinction.
Led by scientists from the Zoological Society of London, the EDGE (evolutionary distinct and globally endangered) Coral Reefs project is aiming to preserve and protect the world’s most important species of coral from the increasing threats they face.
Focal coral reef species
Among the 10 species chosen to kick start the project are the pearl bubble coral, a colonial species that forms massive colonies with many small, bubble-like vesicles, and the mushroom coral Heliofungia actiniformis, which lives as a solitary polyp with many long tentacles that provide shelter to a variety of marine organism, including the colourful clown fish.
Coral reefs are under pressure from a variety of threats including overfishing, pollution, rising sea temperatures due to climate change, and increased ocean acidity, both of which can lead to coral bleaching. When a coral is bleached it expels its symbiotic algae, known as zooxanthellae, meaning the coral cannot photosynthesise and so cannot feed.
Conservationists intend to focus their efforts on the ‘coral triangle’ around the Philippines, the West Indian Ocean around the Mozambique Channel, and in the Caribbean Channel. They plan to provide local conservationists with the training and equipment needed to carry out the research, with initial projects lasting two years.
Importance of coral reefs
The project will temporarily increase the resilience of coral reefs to environmental change, but conservationists concede that part of the solution in the future must involve the designation of more of the ocean as marine protected areas. With coral reefs – the rainforests of the oceans – being the planet’s most diverse marine ecosystem, and harbouring up to a third of all marine life, it is vital that coral reefs flourish in the future.
The elkhorn coral Acropora palmata has undergone a 95 percent decline in many shallow Caribbean reefs in the past three decades.
The entire surface of the distinctive pearl bubble coral (Physogyra lichtensteini) is covered in vesicles, which retract when the coral is disturbed.
Among the 10 species chosen to kick start the project are the pearl bubble coral, a colonial species that forms massive colonies with many small, bubble-like vesicles, and the mushroom coral Heliofungia actiniformis, which lives as a solitary polyp with many long tentacles that provide shelter to a variety of marine organism, including the colourful clown fish.
“Coral reefs are threatened with functional extinction in the next 20-50 years, due predominantly to global climate change. 2010 seems set to have been one of the worst years for coral bleaching.” Catherine Head, co-ordinator of the EDGE Coral Reefs project.
Endemic to the Chagos Archipelago, the peculiar Ctenella chagius is able to extend its stomach onto the living tissues of an adjacent coral and kill it.
Importance of coral reefs
The project will temporarily increase the resilience of coral reefs to environmental change, but conservationists concede that part of the solution in the future must involve the designation of more of the ocean as marine protected areas. With coral reefs – the rainforests of the oceans – being the planet’s most diverse marine ecosystem, and harbouring up to a third of all marine life, it is vital that coral reefs flourish in the future.
Spotlight on: Seacology
When many people dream of the perfect summer vacation or holiday, visions of sandy beaches, crystal clear waters and lush forests come to mind. Islands are a home away from home for many travelers around the world but most people are unaware of the amazing biodiversity that island habitats support. This is where our partners at Seacology come in.
Seacology is an environmental nonprofit with the sole purpose of preserving the highly endangered biodiversity of islands throughout the world. In the last 400 years, the majority of the world’s plant and animal extinctions have taken place on islands. By working with indigenous island peoples, Seacology strives to find the middle ground between improving human life while maintaining the environmental integrity of islands habitats and species.
With a favorable year-round climate and isolation from large land masses, tropical islands support some of the most unique species on Earth. Here’s a sample of some of Seacology’s most recent projects, highlighting the endangered species they have helped to protect.
In exchange for a new community health clinic in Papua New Guinea, Seacology established a 988-acre no-take coastal marine conservation area providing a permanent sanctuary for many island species including the Asian giant softshell turtle, an easily recognizable species with its broad head and eyes close to the tip of its snout.
The stunning bowl coral is just one of the many corals, fish, crabs and other marine species safely protected for the next 10 years near the island of Tonga in the South Pacific. Through another agreement between Seacology and local island peoples, 368 acres of a critical marine habitat reserve are protected into the next decade in return for an updated community hall building.
Seacology is an environmental nonprofit with the sole purpose of preserving the highly endangered biodiversity of islands throughout the world. In the last 400 years, the majority of the world’s plant and animal extinctions have taken place on islands. By working with indigenous island peoples, Seacology strives to find the middle ground between improving human life while maintaining the environmental integrity of islands habitats and species.
With a favorable year-round climate and isolation from large land masses, tropical islands support some of the most unique species on Earth. Here’s a sample of some of Seacology’s most recent projects, highlighting the endangered species they have helped to protect.
Ocean life in shocking decline
The world’s oceans are in a “shocking” state and marine species may face an unprecedented extinction event, an international panel of experts has warned.
One of the report’s co-authors, Dan Laffoley, Marine Chair of IUCN’s World Commission on Protected Areas, and Senior Advisor on Marine Science and Conservation for IUCN, admitted that the challenges were vast. “But unlike previous generations, we know what now needs to happen,” he said. “The time to protect the blue heart of our planet is now.”
The many threats to the world’s coral reefs include increasing ocean temperatures, which can cause coral ‘bleaching’, as shown in this Acropora species.
The panel was brought together by the International Programme on the State of the Ocean (IPSO) and involved scientists from across a range disciplines. It was the first to consider the cumulative impacts of the pressures facing the oceans, including pollution, ocean acidification, ocean warming, over-fishing and hypoxia (reduced oxygen levels).
Rapid pace of change
“The findings are shocking,” said Alex Rogers, Scientific Director of IPSO and a professor of conservation biology at Oxford University. “As we considered the cumulative effect of what humankind does to the oceans, the implications became far worse than we had individually realised… almost right across the board we’re seeing changes that are happening faster than we’d thought, or in ways that we didn’t expect to see for hundreds of years.”
Overfishing has brought species such as the southern bluefin tuna to the brink of extinction.
These rapid changes include the melting of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, sea level rise, and the release of methane trapped in the sea bed. More worrying is how different threats are acting together in ways that had not previously been recognised, their combined effects being worse than each threat alone.
For example, some pollutants have been found to stick to the surfaces of tiny plastic particles in the ocean, increasing the amounts of these pollutants being consumed by marine creatures. Global climate change, ocean acidification, pollution and overfishing are also working together to increase the pressures on the world’s coral reefs, many of which are now in severe decline.
Sixth mass extinction?
The combined effects of these stresses mean that ocean ecosystems are unable to recover, being constantly under attack from multiple threats. The panel concluded that not only are we already seeing significant declines in marine species and habitats, but that we now face losing species and entire marine ecosystems, such as coral reefs, within a single generation.
Life on Earth has gone through five “mass extinction” events in the past, and human activities are now thought to be causing a sixth such event. The panel’s report said that the combination of threats to the ocean is creating the same conditions found in every major extinction in Earth’s history. Levels of carbon dioxide being absorbed by the ocean are already far greater than at the time of the last mass extinction of marine life, some 55 million years ago. The rate of the ocean’s degeneration is also far greater than anyone had predicted.
Manta ray entangled in a fishing net.
Conserving the world’s oceans
The panel’s conclusions will be presented in a report at the UN headquarters in New York later this week, when discussions will take place aimed at reforming governance of the oceans. The report calls for urgent measures to better conserve ocean ecosystems, and in particular to improve governance of the largely unprotected high seas.
IPSO’s immediate recommendations include stopping exploitative fishing, especially on the high seas where there is little effective regulation. It also recommends mapping and then reducing pollutants, such as plastics, fertilisers and human waste, which are entering the oceans. In addition, sharp reductions need to be made in greenhouse gas emissions, and research is urgently needed into ways of reducing carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
Like many marine species, the green turtle faces a range of threats. This species is classified as Endangered by the IUCN.
Thứ Ba, 29 tháng 11, 2011
Northern Line Islands Expedition
Northern Line Islands
In 2010 and 2011, Dr. Enric Sala and a team of scientists traveled to the northern Line Islands in the North Pacific. There, the crew discovered a marine world that science never knew existed—one that hadn't yet been explored and damaged by humans, with an ecosystem little changed from its condition hundreds of years ago."We started at an island with 10,000 people and very degraded marine life," Sala explains. "We continued to an island with 2,500 people, then to one with ten people, and finally to one with zero people and a virtually intact ecosystem. It was a trip back in time, from degraded to pristine."
5 Underwater Hot-Spots
Summer is coming and with it, the need to go to the beach, swim or practice water sports. Adrenaline is the driving force behind this exciting hobby. For the water sports fanatics, we have rounded up 5 of the best locations to practice snorkelling, diving, swimming or surfing.
1. The Great Barrier Reef is the world’s largest coral reef system that contains over 2,900 individual reefs and 900 islands. Located in the north-east coast of Australia, the Coral Reef is the only organic collective that can be seen from the Earth’s orbit. It has been declared a World Heritage site in 1981, also being rightfully considered one of the wonders of the natural world. The idyllic islands, sights and coral cays cover over 300,000 square kilometres. The abundant wildlife is probably the best reason to visit this amazing natural wonder: it is house to more than 1500 species of fish, 4000 types of mollusc and more than 200 species of bird life.
2.Located in the Sulu Sea, Palawan, the Philippines, the Tubbataha Reef Marine Park is a true marine sanctuary made up of two atolls. The reef lays on extinct underwater volcanoes, having an amazing pristine coral reefs set on a 100-m perpendicular wall. Apart from several lagoons and two spectacular coral islands, Tubbataha offers one of the best diving experience worldwide. It is an opportunity to explore the habitats of many fish colonies or see the endangered hawksbill sea turtles. Apart from the extensive marine wildlife, the Tubbataha Reef is also a bird sanctuary, home to tens of thousands of birds during their annual migrations.
3. Located near the town of Bouillante in Guadeloupe, the Jacques Cousteau Underwater Reserve offers the opportunity to snorkel and explore the vivid coral and marine wildlife or retreat on a beautiful black sand beach. The marine preserve encompasses several dive sites off the coast of Guadeloupe. Around the the area you can enjoy the National Park of Guadeloupe or the Botanical Gardens, packed with hiking trails, waterfalls and lush vegetation. Keep in mind that it is forbidden to take a piece of coral or bother a sea turtle.
4. The largest raised coral atoll on earth, Aldabra is comprised of four coral islands that surround the shallow lagoon. The atoll is locatyed in the Indian Ocean, and belongs to the Seychelles. Protected from man’s influence, Aldabra is a major wildlife refuge, being home to 152,000 giant tortoises – the world’s largest population of this reptile. The tortoises weigh a quarter of a ton and can often live pass 100 years. Due to the fragile flora and fauna, the atoll receives around 1000+ visitors a year. Aldabra is recognized as an endemic bird area and has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1982.
5. Named one of the Seven Underwater Wonders of the World, the Galapagos Islands are one of the best scuba-diving destinations you can come across. The main dive hotspots are Wolf Island and Darwin Island, two eroded volcanos located on a volcanic ridge. The islands are inhabited by sea birds and are home to diverse marine species, being seldomly visited, except by scientists and scuba divers. They are famous for the “Vampire” finch, a species of the sharp-beaked ground finch that pecks at nesting boobies, drinking their blood. Also, Darwin Island is the only one in the archipelago where the sooty tern breeds. All things connsidered, the two attractions in the Galapagos Islands are one of the hottest diving hotspots in the world.
Undersea Explorer
Using state-of-the-art underwater photography, scuba divers travel the world's oceans, lakes, and wateways on intriguing journeys to rarely seen strange and unusual underwater kingdoms.
Bermuda Reef Explorer, Hamilton
Once in Bermuda, whether it be for work or vacations, one of the must-do activities is to explore the amazing reefs that surround the island.
One of the best ways to do so is without doubts to take a tour on the BERMUDA Reef Explorer, Hamilton. It is Bermuda’s largest glass-bottom boat with a length of 70 feet and and a beam of 20 feet.
Owned by Captain Michael Gladwin who bought it from Bermuda Island Cruises and has over 25 years of marine experience, the boat can hold up to 150 passengers in two large open deck and a lower deck where you will find the glass-bottom. Since she was given a major refit in 2007, the Reef Explorer has a new dive platform at the rear.
There are different cruises available, from a glass-bottom tour to a snorkel adventure, a fun tour of Bermuda and a pirate party adventure.
If you ever wanted to discover what lays beneath the ocean surface without getting wet, then the glass-bottom adventure is definitely for you. The two-hour tour takes you Turtle Cove to see Atlantic Green Turtles living on the sand flats. As the boat dwells above them, you can observe them by the glass-bottom as well as seeing them really close when they surface next to it.
On the way, you will stop by the Vixen, a nearly-submerged shipwreck where you can feed hundreds of fish. One arrived to destination, the lower floor hatches are removed to reveal the glass-bottom and the wonderful and coloured coral reefs and many species of fish.
During the whole trip, Captain Michael Gladwin will share with you his knowledge and provide you with commentaries and many interesting facts about Bermuda. The Captain is for many passengers the plus of the Reef Explorer tours.
How tourism—even green tourism!—is killing the world’s reefs
Coral reef off the Egyptian coast
The culprits:
- Snorkeling and diving – swimmers astonished by the reefs’ beauty touch the fragile corals, causing serious damage. SOLUTION: stay away from those reefs! And if for whatever reason you find yourself down there, hands off, kids!
- Sunscreen – chemicals in the sunscreen dissolving off swimmers’ skins intensifies the decline of coral populations. SOLUTION: choose biodegradable sunscreen or wear a t-shirt.
- Disturbed sediment – unnaturally strong currents (caused by swimmers, yachts, motorboats, and so on) can alter sediment and provoke the diaspora of animal life as the animals lose their home. Another consequence is sand settling onto coral formations. SOLUTION: stay off those boats!
- Anchors of motorboats, yachts, etc. – these can destroy corals and thereby their entire ecosystem, which results in animals losing their homes. SOLUTION: just say no!
- The collection of specimens – despite the seemingly infinite abundance of marine life, the removal of species is not only detrimental to the ecosystem, but may also result in the accidental removal of rare and endangered species. SOLUTION: refrain from collecting any specimens and do your best to discourage others from doing so.
- Increase in sedimentation – as tourism grows, so does the construction of hotels and other developments used to accommodate travelers. With construction comes pollution in the form of noise, contaminated air and water, and copious sedimentation both natural and synthetic. Higher amounts of sedimentation close to the shore encourage ocean species to move farther offshore, where lower levels of nutrients are available for their consumption and they are more vulnerable to the pernicious attacks of motorboats, etc. SOLUTION: consider going somewhere else for the holidays, or remain strictly green and encourage others to follow your lead – which should be a perpetual tactic for us eco travelers anyway!
- Waste – more people equals more waste. While proper waste disposal methods are usually available, many tourists are ignorant of environmentally friendly ways to dispose of their waste. Another problem is the myriad tourists who just don’t care about the environment enough to change their destructive habits. Their garbage then winds up floating on the water and sticking to coral reefs. SOLUTION: speak up when you see someone littering and kindly point them in the right direction.
- Pollution – While some vacation spots aren’t located within industrialized areas, it is usually inevitable that pollutants will be released into the air, land, and water in the forms of fuel, oil, paint, sewage, and so on. SOLUTION: go green or don’t go at all!
It is imperative that we continue to raise awareness about green tourism to inspire respect for our precious planet. As we continue to devise new ways to mitigate humans’ effects on our planet, we owe it to ourselves to compassionately educate those around us.
Coral reefs are facing extinction
Healthy coral reef on the North coast of East Timor.
In this first of four posts, I will explore the dismal situation of coral reefs and their lack of official protection from trade, plus the incredible importance of these species for the survival of marine life and, in turn, human life. In the second part of this series, I will look at climate change and unknown causes jeopardizing the existence of coral reefs across the world’s oceans. In the third part of the series, I will explore coral reefs’ overexploitation,and in the fourth, unknown causes of coral mortality.
Coral reefs are facing increasing danger due to various factors, ranging from climate change and harvesting to different types of pollution, tourism, and outbreaks of disease, to fishing, overexploitation, infestation by pestilent species and even unknown causes.
Exacerbating these problems is a lack of legal protection for coral reefs by international official organizations.
Coral reefs suffer from a massive lack of protection
The world’s largest international ocean conservation organization, Oceana, recently released a statement chastising the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) for refusing to grant trade protection to 31 threatened species of red and pink coral. The convention voted to exclude these corals from its Appendix II listing during CITES’ two-week-long March meeting in Doha, Qatar, where it discussed the state of myriad species and ecosystems in dire straits.“An Appendix II listing would require the use of export permits to ensure that the species were caught by a legal and sustainably managed fishery,” said Oceana.These 31 species of coral from the western Pacific Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea are being increasingly harvested for their use in jewelry, souvenirs, and even homeopathic products, according to Oceana, a phenomenon is leading to the extinction of coral reefs. This issue alone (which I will look at in the third part of this series of posts), many insist, is enough to warrant the species’ listing under Appendix II.
Locations of coral reefs across the globe.The importance of coral reefs
Coral reefs provide uncountable species with shelter and the foundation of an intricate and fragile marine food chain. By extension, hundreds of millions of humans worldwide obtain their food and livelihoods from the life that thrives off coral reefs. Thus, without them, these masses would be left with a dearth of food and income, which would lead not only to famine and poverty, but also possibly to wars through political upheaval.Locations of coral reefs across the globe.
“Whole nations will be threatened in terms of their existence,” said Carl Gustaf Lundin of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature.Grouper, snapper, oysters, clams, and other commonly consumed species would disappear without coral reefs.
“Fish will become a luxury good,” said Cassandra deYoung of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. “You already have a billion people who are facing hunger, and this is just going to aggravate the situation,” she added. “We will not be able to maintain food security around the world.”Old Dominion University professor Kent Carpenter is the director of a worldwide census of marine species. He warned that if climate change continues to wreak havoc on the planet, all coral reefs could be extinct within a century.
“You could argue that a complete collapse of the marine ecosystem would be one of the consequences of losing corals,” Carpenter said. “You’re going to have a tremendous cascade effect for all life in the oceans.”Clearly, this is a key issue for the entire planet, for the balance of ecosystems worldwide, and thus the wellbeing of non-humans and humans alike.
Coral reefs are facing extinction
Coral bleaching
(Here is the first post of the series, which covers the general dismal situation of coral reefs and their lack of official protection from trade, plus the incredible importance of these species for the survival of marine life and, in turn, human life.)
How climate change is threatening coral reefs
Ocean acidification
Carbon dioxide (CO2), as we know, plays a huge role in warming up our planet and causing climate change. What you might not know is that one-third of the planet’s carbon dioxide is absorbed by the ocean, and the more CO2 the ocean absorbs, the greater the waters’ acidity. The effects of ocean acidification, as this phenomenon is called, remain partly unpredictable.Scientists do know, however, that worsening ocean acidification harms coral reefs, crustaceans, and shellfish because it weakens these species’ calcium carbonate shells. These animals thus become unable to build thick, protective shells for themselves and turn into easier prey for predators and pollution.
Coral reefs located near the poles will suffer these effects more sharply than those in warmer waters for two reasons: first, colder water absorbs more CO2 than warm water, and second, coral reefs in cold water grow at a slower pace than other coral reefs.
Bleached coralsCoral bleaching and disease
Warming waters also cause the bleaching of coral reefs. Naturally occurring, beneficial bacteria living on coral turns begins to disappear as temperatures rise, facilitating the onslaught of pathogenic bacteria that cause bleaching and other types of disease.Bleached corals
Moreover, the type of pathogenic bacteria that take over coral reefs sticks even if the temperature drops low enough to provoke the return of beneficial bacteria. By this time, the coral is too sick to recover and dies.
For those interested, here is an article on a recently created mathematical model that explains how coral reefs die due to warming waters.
Here is the U.S.’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) explanation:
“Because many corals live in water which is already near their upper temperature limit, a water temperature increase of only a few degrees can be deadly. As water temperatures rise, corals become increasingly stressed. When stress levels get too high, corals expel the symbiotic algae, or zooxanthellae (tiny one-celled plants) which live within the thin layer of live coral tissue. Zooxanthellae are important because they turn sunlight into food for their coral hosts. They also facilitate the formation of the coral skeleton — the main structural component of coral reefs. Because zooxanthellae give corals their various rich colors, a coral without zooxanthellae appears bleached. Corals can not thrive without zooxanthellae. For coral reefs that are already stressed due to poor water quality, destructive fishing, or frequent interactions with irresponsible divers and snorkellers, increased water temperatures could become the proverbial straw that breaks the camel’s back.”
Coral reefs are facing extinction
Pink coral
In this third of four posts, I will discuss the overexploitation of pink and red coral in particular. In the first, I looked at the dismal situation of coral reefs and their lack of official protection from trade, plus the incredible importance of these species for the survival of marine life and, in turn, human life. In the second, I explored how climate change is jeopardizing the existence of coral reefs across the world’s oceans. In the fourth, I will talk about unknown causes of coral reef mortality.
The problem with harvesting pink and red coral
I recently wrote about the bleak state of coral reefs around the globe. In this post, I would like to examine why harvesting pink and red coral, or Corallidae, in particular, is problematic.The coral trade is worth tens of millions of dollars per year. Some 30-50 tons of pink and red coral are harvested yearly. A coral necklace can go for as much as hundreds of thousands of dollars in the jewelry market.
You’ve surely seen jewelry made from pink and red coral beads – pendants, earrings, and so forth. Well, much of this coral is harvested unsustainably (can you even sustainably harvest a living thing that grows at a rate of less than 1 mm in thickness per year and can live up to 100 years? This is why I am suspicious of the claims defending the sustainable harvest of coral reefs.).
The use of red and pink coral can be substituted with black coral, a species already protected by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). CITES, by the way, refused to add red and pink coral to its Appendix II listing during its two-week-long March meeting in Doha, Qatar, where it discussed the state of myriad ecosystems currently in calamitous straits.
Red coral
“It is now up to the jewelry and design industries, and their customers, to act where governments have failed.”Even elite jewelry retailer Tiffany & Co., jewelry designer Temple St. Clair, ocean conservationist Celine Cousteau and numerous others voiced support for the proposal to add red and pink coral to CITES’ Appendix II listing.
Coral reefs are facing extinction
A diving buddy pair taking Reef Check Australia substrate data on the Great Barrier Reef.
Unknown causes of seaweed overgrowth
Australia’s 345,000-square-km Great Barrier Reef has been found partly choked by seaweed, according to surveys conducted in 2009. Over 40% of the coral reef areas closest to shore were found clogged with the weed.“We are concerned about it because it does look like a lot of weed and in other places in the world, weed is an indication of decline,” said marine biologist Professor David Bellwood from James Cook University.Bellwood suspects the overgrowth has been caused by the depletion of algae-eating fish around the coral reef. Without the presence of fish to feed on algae, of course, the plant is allowed to flourish unfettered and smother coral polyps.
“The question is, does this mean the Barrier Reef is in real trouble? That the reef is rotting from the inside out? Or does it mean to say that that amount of weed is natural? And the answer is: it’s hard to say,” he said.Yet, alarmingly, he assured that
“The Great Barrier Reef is in the best condition of any reef in the world.”Yowza. Sounds like dire news to me. It’s like saying that guy who suffers from asthma still breathes better than everyone else. He’s still got asthma, so how well can he really be doing?
As well, algae growth is caused by elevated nutrient levels in the water due to fertilizer runoff (from golf courses, farms, and so on) and untreated sewage.
It has also been suggested that sedimentation—possibly caused by heavy rainfall—can spark algal overgrowth. Other ways sedimentation promotes coral death is by smothering or burial (reef-building corals depend on high light, high oxygen, low turbidity, low nutrients, and open ocean salinity to remain healthy); decreasing growth through coral abrasion and shading; increasing the production of respiration and mucus; and by reducing coral reproduction, coral larval settlement, and early survival.
Unknown causes of coral malformations
White warts and tumors that show up on coral reefs are irregular shaped skeletal abnormalities. Because these malformations display fewer protective mucous cells than regular corals, and a porous skeleton, they are especially vulnerable to predation and erosion from algae and other organisms. In turn, damaged coral abnormalities cause local coral mortality and can thwart colony fitness and fecundity.The causes of coral malformations are speculated to “range from biological pathogens transmitted by corralivore fishes, genetic mutations and external environmental conditions such as excessive UV radiation exposure,” according to APEX Environmental.
Yellow-band disease on a stony coral
Yellow-band disease on a stony coral
Ocean stressors at play
Ocean acidification is one key factor. Here’s what it’s about: carbon dioxide (CO2) (along with methane and other gasses) plays a huge role in heating up our planet and thereby causing climate change, which includes melting polar ice caps and rising ocean levels. Okay. What you might not know is that one-third of the planet’s CO2 is absorbed by the ocean, and that the more CO2 the ocean absorbs, the greater the waters’ acidity. This phenomenon is called ocean acidification and it’s noxious to our planet for many reasons. For example, rising acidity levels in our oceans have been found to:
- Impair fish hearing and smell, putting their survival in danger
- Kill off endangered species such as northern abalone
- Threaten the survival of krill, itself the basic food source of nearly all animals in the ocean
Coral reef in Papua New Guinea. By Mila Zinkova via Wikimedia Commons
Sharks and other species may be next, warned Rogers, lead author of the International Programme on the State of the Ocean (IPSO) report.
Further, he said that, in many cases, the impacts of ocean stressors were found to have a greater overall effect than any single effect when taken together. For example, the decline of coral reef ecosystems due to overfishing and reef bleaching, plus the acidification that causes bleaching, will eradicate “the most diverse marine ecosystems on the planet.”
A Reef’s Response to Environmental Stress
Surely, many divers and snorkelers have argued that to swim among the plants and animals in a tropical coral reef is one of life’s most pleasant experiences. Those with a scientific bent are easily drawn to the diversity of fishes and other sea life or the play of the tide between the coral columns. Most first-time visitors, however, are simply overwhelmed by the color of the seascape. Against the backdrop of azure, other colors (reds, yellows, greens, and purples) stand out on the bodies of the fishes, crustaceans, corals, and other forms of life.
Bleached staghorn coral (Acropora cervicornis) in the Caribbean Sea--Stephen Frink/Corbis
This phenomenon, called coral bleaching, has natural, as well as anthropogenic (human-caused), origins. Before this can be explained, it is important to understand how corals obtain their color. Corals are transparent animals related to jellyfish. Like jellyfish, they have a mobile form called a medusa and a sessile (sedentary) form called a polyp. The structures commonly known as coral are actually large colonies of coral polyps and the intricate calcium carbonate skeletons they secrete.
Sea fan (genus Gorgonia), a branching variety of coral, in the Belize Barrier Reef--© Herbert Schwarte/FPG International
Bleaching occurs when coral polyps are separated from their algal symbionts in response to disease or serious environmental stress; however, it is sometimes observed when the algae lose their pigment. With the algae removed, coral polyps and their skeletons appear starkly white. Some examples of the stressors capable of causing coral bleaching include changes in seawater chemistry resulting from pollution or ocean acidification, sedimentation, and exposure to the air during low tide. Some stressors impair the process of photosynthesis, which results in a loss of nutrients for the coral, or cause zooxanthellae to manufacture versions of helpful compounds that are harmful to the coral. In addition, some zooxanthellae might grow too quickly or divide too rapidly within the coral polyp. The end result of these activities is the breakdown of the symbiosis between the algae and the coral breaks down. If the stress is mild and does not last too long, zooxanthellae will recolonize the coral, and the coral colony will recover. On the other hand, if the bleaching lasts longer than a few months, the coral will starve and perish.
Most incidences of coral bleaching involve extended changes in seawater temperature. In general, tropical corals and zooxanthallae occur in seawater between 16 and 30 °C (about 61 to 86 °F), and the temperature tolerances of one species may differ greatly from those of another. Studies have shown that temperature increases of 1 to 2 °C (1.8 to 3.6 °F) above a coral’s upper tolerance limit for a period of 5–10 weeks during the warmer months of the year are enough to induce bleaching, and such heat stress appears to affect the zooxanthellae first. Warm seawater prompts zooxanthellae to manufacture forms of oxygen and other chemical products that are toxic to the coral, and these toxins build up in the coral’s tissues. Many scientists think that the coral can detect this buildup and jettison the algae. Furthermore, heat stress also increases the susceptibility of the zooxanthellae, as well as the coral polyps, to disease and exacerbates problems caused by other stressors.
Cold water, too, can be an enemy. Some corals have been shown to bleach when seawater temperatures drop 3 to 5 °C (5.4 to 9 °F) below their lower tolerance limit for 5–10 days. During episodes of cold-water stress, photosynthesis slows or shuts down completely, which may also lead to a buildup of toxins in the tissues of both zooxanthellae and the coral.
Temperature stress can be caused by seasonal changes occurring in the oceans, or it can be caused by major disruptions in normal climate patterns. The amount of heat energy available to marine ecosystems, even those in tropical and subtropical latitudes, changes with the time of year.
A diver exploring a coral reef in the Maldives--A. Witte/C. Mahaney—Stone/Getty Images
On the other hand, bleaching episodes produced by large-scale climate disruptions—such as those caused by El Niño, La Niña, and climate change brought on by global warming—last longer, are more severe, and their influence on seawater temperature can extend to marine ecosystems across the globe. These forces often push seawater temperatures beyond the tolerance limits of many corals and zooxanthelae for weeks and months at a time, and thus have the potential to kill the coral colonies occurring over wide areas. El Niño brings unusually warm sea-surface conditions to the tropical Pacific Ocean that may last several months. Along with its counterpart, La Niña (which delivers cooler-than-average sea-surface conditions to the region), El Niño can influence prevailing seasonal climatic patterns beyond the Pacific basin and cause mass bleaching events in areas as far flung as the Caribbean Sea and the western Indian Ocean.
In the aftermath of the unusually powerful El Niño of 1997–98, scientists studying Australia’s Great Barrier Reef estimated that more than 60 percent suffered from some sort of bleaching and that nearly 90 of the corals were killed in some areas. Scientists also note that general increases in seawater temperatures caused by global warming (1 °C [1 °F] by the year 2050) will have the effect of reducing the coral’s upper margin of temperature tolerance. Consequently, they fear that coral colonies will bleach more frequently and more completely in the coming decades, result in greater incidences of coral death.
In terms of biological diversity, coral reefs in the oceans are comparable to tropical rainforests on land. They contain 25 percent of all marine species, and the reef itself, which is largely made up of vast living coral colonies, provides habitat to multitudes of fishes, crustaceans, and other marine life. So, when coral death occurs, the impact is felt in the various species that eat coral, as well as those that rely on other species that live within coral colonies.
Juvenile fish taking shelter in a large brain coral, Cahuita, Costa Rica--© Brandon Liddell
Although the coral bleaching occurs naturally, the continued release of heat-trapping carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases from human activities appears to be exacerbating the problem, because some of the heat trapped by the atmosphere is transferred to the oceans. Since heat stress has been blamed for most of the coral bleaching cases around the world, we humans should do whatever we can to prevent this heat transfer from occurring.
The most obvious way to do this is to reduce the amount of greenhouse gases we release from our industries, homes, and automobiles. While we wait for our leaders to come up with laws that truly confront the problem of global warming, all of us should do what we can to conserve energy and find alternatives to greenhouse-gas-producing fossil fuels.
What is a coral?
What may look like one coral is actually a colony of thousands of coral polyps living very close together.
Inside the tissue of a coral polyp, zooxanthellae (plant-like cells) make their home. The coral and zooxanthellae work together to survive.
Hard corals have a skeleton that supports them. It is made out of the same substance that shellfish use to make their shells––calcium carbonate.
Corals can grow into structures as small as a coin and as large as an entire island. There are thousands of coral species.
Are corals plants, animals, or rocks?
Well, corals are animals. However, corals make a calcium carbonate skeleton that looks similar to a rock and have a symbiotic relationship with plant-like cells called zooxanthellae.The zooxanthellae living in the soft tissue of a coral polyp use sunlight to produce food through photosynthesis and create a byproduct that the coral can use as food. Thus, zooxanthellae provide corals with food; in return, the coral provides the zooxanthellae with shelter and nutrients.
Corals also capture food. At night, they stretch out their stinging tentacles and catch the microscopic organisms that float in the water and digest them in their stomachs. So, corals have two ways of getting food—through zooxanthellae and capturing microscopic organisms.
Corals grow in warm shallow waters that receive plenty of light. Thus, there are many places in the Pacific Ocean where corals can live, but corals can also be found around the world including the Indian Ocean, Caribbean Sea, Red Sea, and Arabian Gulf, and in places influenced by warm currents such as the Florida coast.
A few species can tolerate cooler and deeper waters; however, most coral species live in waters close to the warmest temperature they can tolerate (about 85° F or 29° C). This means that slight increases in ocean temperature can harm corals. Already climate change and the warmer ocean waters associated with it have decreased the health of corals and triggered bleaching events in certain areas. As climate change continues, corals will be placed under more stress.
How do hard corals build skeletons and reefs?
For protection and support, hard corals build skeletons made of calcium carbonate. To do this, a coral polyp secretes layer upon layer of calcium carbonate underneath its body. As time goes by, the skeleton grows larger and larger, and the polyp lives on its outside edge. As long as a polyp can get the right building material from the water, it can build a strong skeleton.Soft corals do not build calcium carbonate skeletons. Instead, they are supported by tiny spines.
Hard corals are often called the reef builders because their skeletons provide support for other corals and other organisms. Soft corals do not build calcium carbonate skeletons. Instead they have spines that support them. They are not considered reef-builders.
When hundreds or thousands of coral polyps build their skeletons close together, they create a calcium carbonate structure that provides habitat and food for a variety of organisms. This is known as a coral reef.
Đăng ký:
Nhận xét (Atom)