Reuters; 11 January,
2008
New Approach Needed To Save Coral Reefs.
LONDON
(Reuters) - A growing human population
is pushing coral reefs in the Caribbean
to breaking point and saving them will
require a new, larger-scale approach,
researchers said on Tuesday.
Coral reefs have long
been under threat but pinpointing whether
overfishing, climate change or development
is the main culprit has proved both
contentious and difficult, said Camilo
Mora, a marine biologist at Dalhousie
University in Canada .
In their study, researchers
monitored coral reefs in 322 sites across
13 countries throughout the Caribbean
and analyzed databases on fishing, sedimentation
and population growth.
The team, which also
looked at agricultural land use, temperature,
hurricanes, coral disease and richness
of the reefs, determined that coastal
development was most harmful.
"The study showed
clearly that the number of people living
in close proximity to coral reefs is
the main driver of mortality of corals,"
the researchers said in the study, which
was published in the Proceedings of
the Royal Society.
More people means more
of everything that damages coral reefs,
including fishing, sewage, coastal construction
and human activities that contribute
to warming oceans.
Coral reefs, delicate
undersea structures resembling rocky
gardens that are made by tiny animals
called coral polyps, are important nurseries
and shelters for fish and other sea
life.
They are also considered
valuable protection for coastlines from
high seas, a critical source of food
for millions of people, important for
tourism and a potential storehouse of
medicines for cancer and other diseases.
But researchers and
environmental groups have warned that
coral reefs worldwide could be destroyed
unless governments urgently change how
they manage the marine ecosystem.
"This new study
moves from the traditional localized
study of threats to a region-wide scale,"
Mora and colleagues wrote.
The coral reef is critical
to the Caribbean economy, generating
$4 billion each year in trade for the
fishing and tourism industries, as well
as jobs for government workers responsible
for monitoring the reefs, Mora said.
(Reporting by
Michael Kahn, Editing by Maggie Fox
and Jon Boyle)