[Coral-List] reef restoration
Don Baker
reefpeace at yahoo.com
Thu May 22 03:35:38 UTC 2008
Gene,
Exactly!
I have made recommendations in reef restorations via transplants in North Borneo, Sabah, Malaysia in the past based on being a "Sherlock Holmes" of sorts, whereas, one must determine what species of corals were originally growing successful there in the first place - if at all - by digging through rubble, skeletons, and even the pebbles.
I have seen many coral transplant endeavors fail because the parties never did this preliminary works and planted corals species that never grew there in the first place for a variety of reasons; ecologically and environmentally.
Don Baker
Guam
Gene Shinn <eshinn at marine.usf.edu> wrote: The various discussions of reef restoration/recovery/resiliency etc.,
have been interesting. Throughout this long thread no one has
mentioned geology! I would suggest that before anyone begins
restoration projects a few core holes should be drilled. It helps to
know if coral ever thrived in a place before pumping money into
recovery efforts. What biologists and divers call a reef isn't always
a reef. The same is true of seagrass mitigation/restoration projects.
A simple push core will determine if seagrass ever lived in a
mitigation area. It makes no sense to transplant seagrass, or corals,
to a place where they never thrived in the first place.
Martin Moe had it right. It may be worthwhile to do restoration
in "special places." Special places are rare in the Florida Keys. By
special I mean the reef has grown to more than a few meters thick and
has built up to near sea level. That's why ships hit them! These
special places usually have lighthouses and markers and they have
been given special names. Why are those places so special? Because
they make up no more than a few percent of the entire Florida Keys
Reef Tract. The rest of the 150-mile-long so-called reef tract is
less than 2 m thick and some of it is just bare Pleistocene limestone
with scattered coral heads, sponges, gorgonians, and fish. Most
divers call these areas reefs but they are basically hard ground
communities. Because corals in these hard ground areas (about 98
percent of the reef tract) have been unable to construct a reef, and
have undergone previous die-offs during the past approximately 6,000
years, it would be a waste of time an money to attempt resurrection.
The expression, "beating a dead horse" comes to mind. Sometimes a
little geology could save a lot of public money. Gene
--
No Rocks, No Water, No Ecosystem (EAS)
------------------------------------ -----------------------------------
E. A. Shinn, Courtesy Professor
University of South Florida
Marine Science Center (room 204)
140 Seventh Avenue South
St. Petersburg, FL 33701
Tel 727 553-1158----------------------------------
-----------------------------------
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"Dedication and motivated direction in achieving specific goals related to the care and protection of living things is not necessarily a guaranteed formula for success. Success is, more often than not, a direct result of a persons passion in addition to the above formula." [Don Baker, Marine Conservationist/Activist, 1998]
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