Coral Reef Institute
- 10 Ways to Protect Coral Reefs
1.
If you dive or snorkel – Take only photos and leave only
bubbles! Keep your fins, equipment, and hands off the coral reefs. A
single touch can kill live corals.
2.
Recycle – keeping trash out of oceans and landfills will
assist in the water quality.
3.
Conserve Water – the less water you use, the less
wastewater eventually finds its way back to the ocean.
4.
Support organizations that protect coral reefs.
Your support is very important.
5.
Reduce or eliminate fertilizers and pesticides
from your life. No matter how far from the ocean environment you are the
residues will make their way back to the ocean.
6.
Do not anchor on the reef ecosystems. Use mooring buoys
when available. If your favorite dive site does not have buoys –
organize a project to install them!
7.
Do not throw away trash. There is no away! Carry your
trash home with you – if others leave trash behind, pick it up and carry
it to a proper disposal site. Plastic bags, six-pack rings, and other
trash can kill sea life.
8.
Respect local guidelines when visiting reefs. Ask at
local environmentally friendly businesses how to be a reef-friendly
tourist.
9.
Volunteer for local beach clean-ups and reef clean up
programs. Being a part of the solution is better than being part of the
problem.
10.
Report illegal activities on reef ecosystems. Illegal
fishing, improper anchoring, dumping of trash should be reported to
proper authorities.
Even if you live
far from the ocean your environmental impact can have serious
implications for the coral reef ecosystem.
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Coral Spawning
In 1981, Australian researchers on the Great Barrier Reef
stumbled across an amazing natural phenomenon. All of a sudden,
millions of tiny cells began spewing out of the living corals.
They poured into the water column like champagne bubbles,
floating to the surface and forming a thick, pink 'slick'. The
researchers had witnessed coral spawning, an annual event, which
occurs in all coral, reefs around the world. |
Today we know that many corals living on the Great Barrier Reef spawn
about four to five days after the full moon in October or November and
sometimes in December.
Why do corals spawn after a full moon, and why do the east and west
coast corals spawn at such different times of the year, despite the fact
that these reefs have many species in common?
Where: Queensland - The Great Barrier Reef
There are three triggers that set off spawning in corals, according to
coral reef expert Associate Professor Peter Harrison from Southern Cross
University.
-
Firstly there must be a gradual rise
in sea temperature, triggering the eggs and sperm to mature inside
the adult coral.
-
Second, the lunar cycle coordinates
the exact moment at which the corals release their precious cargo
into the water.
-
The third stimulus is related to the
diurnal cycle - coral need the darkness of night to do the wild
thing!
So are corals just lunar freaks?
It's the tide, baby!
According to coral researcher Associate Professor Bette Willis from
James Cook University, it's not actually the moonlight, which gives them
the final nudge, but what the tides are doing at this time of the lunar
cycle. When the moon is full, there is quite a big difference between
high and low tide. Then about five nights later a neap tide occurs. In
this kind of tide, there is a small difference between the heights of
the high and low tides.
Why is this important for coral? A small tidal difference means the
water flow is reduced, and this means weaker currents. This is important
for coral spawn, because calm waters enable the eggs and sperm to hang
around and mix, rather than become too quickly dispersed by water
currents.
Slick moves
When corals spawn, they produce what is known as a spawning slick. These
can be meters wide and kilometers long, and often have a pink or brown
tinge. Slicks have even been detected from space by satellite imagery.
Slicks have been observed by fishermen for years and even occur in the
mythology of some maritime communities. For example, coral slicks have
been associated with a particular Asian legend of a princess who was
captured by a dragon and taken beneath the sea. The coral spawn
supposedly marks the trail of her menstrual blood.
In another story, local fishermen in the East China Sea avoid catching a
normally popular reef fish for about three weeks of the year. During
this time, they say, the fish tastes horrible and becomes inedible. This
period, it turns out, coincides with when the corals spawn. The fish are
probably eating the eggs in the morning. Coral eggs contain a lot of
lipids and also chemicals that deter predators. Indeed, researchers have
noticed that coral spawning slicks sometimes have a sickly sweet or oily
odor, and can even smell like turpentine.
Girl meets buoy
Most corals are hermaphrodite, where both eggs and sperm will develop
within the same polyp. In the branching corals the eggs take about nine
months to develop, and sperm about 3-4 months. They mature at the same
time and when the water temperature and tides are just right, eggs and
sperm are ejected rapidly from the polyps in massive numbers.
The sperm are free-swimming while the lipid-filled eggs float quickly to
the surface. When an egg is fertilized, a tiny embryo develops within 24
hours. The tiny baby coral is ready to settle after about five days, and
drops down to the bottom. If it is lucky, it will find a good spot to
grow for many decades.
Mass Spawning in Tropical Reef Corals, in Science, 1984, vol 223
pp:1186-1189
Credits
Special thanks to:
Associate Professor Peter Harrison, Southern Cross University.
Dr Andrew Heyward, Australian Institute of Marine Science.
Associate Professor Vicki Harriot, CRC Reef Research.
Associate Professor Bette Willis, James Cook University.
Hard Core Spawn was written by Abbie Thomas.