Thursday, July 10, 2008

Coral reef advocates in an uproar, by gimleteye

The past few days I've been thinking about Dr. James Speth's call for "civic unreasonableness" and NASA's Dr. James Hansen's appeal for scientists to drop "objectivity" from muting their involvement, communicating to the public the impacts of global warming.

Of the canaries in the climate change coal mine, the coral reef is one of the most visible. A listserve for coral reef scientists and professionals is buzzing with comments that US government agencies and scientists have chosen to downplay, or to play only as politically acceptable, the devastation to coral reefs in Florida.

"The reef is for all practical purposes dead and a phase shift to an algal reef with soft corals has occurred." This observation, between Florida Keys conservation activists who have spent decades in the effort to protect natural resources and the Keys coral reef tract, was made in response to ongoing, testy exchanges on the listserve reaching an international audience.

A commercial fisherman in the Keys commented: "... the reef continues to decline and NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) continues to congratulate its self and give awards to others for a job well done! .. I don't think anyone questions the passion of many of the sanctuary volunteers or SAC (sanctuary advisory committee) members, but what are they actually accomplishing? The coral continues to die off at an unprecedented rate along with the continued water quality degradation. That is not cause for celebration. Yet, the awards and self congratulations continue. The danger in this approach to management is that it attempts to make the public feel that all is well..."

And it is not just the Keys coral reef. Florida Bay is a catastrophe, obliterated by serial algae blooms passing through hundreds of square miles of shallow water like toxic clouds, yet many scientists are still picking at the scabs of scientific arguments decades old; unwilling to engage the politics of water pollution and the special interests who are offended.

Well, some say, scientists must not engage in politics.

In a statement released as part of the International Coral Reef Symposium, a gathering of hundreds of scientists and policy makers from around the world who are meeting this week in Fort Lauderdale, NOAA reports: "... nearly half of coral reef ecosystems in the United States are in poor or barely passable condition. "This is absolutely a call to action," said NOAA Coral Program director Kacky Andrews."

But some on the coral reef listserve angrily dismiss repetitive "calls to action" when so little has been done to stop the flood of pollution, nutrients and other human impacts on Florida Bay and the coral reef tract. They say, also, that the incessant drumbeat of the past thirty years -- more science is needed-- is wasted noise.

Of hundreds of thousands of human generations, ours is the first one to witness the loss of so much of the natural world. It is such a simple and remarkable point.

There is a larger context and urgency for this debate on coral reefs: the issue is no longer hard corals or soft corals or even macroalgae suffocating the base of the ocean's food chain: it is whether or own species can avoid mass die-offs as a result of the unchallenged rise of carbon emissions to levels the planet has not experienced for tens of millions of years.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

I say put a bunch of Oil and Natural Gas Platforms out there. They'll attract the fish back to the area.

moderate

That ought to get you guys in a frenzy.

Hey you! said...

All joking aside, after photo monitoring the decline of the coral near Key West over the past 20 years it is very clear that pollution has killed our reef. The water in the Keys has not warmed and all this climate change talk is scapegoat material. Stop the pollution and the coral will return.

Anonymous said...

Craig, do you have some pics to put up on the blog site?

Geniusofdespair said...

Yes do send us photos to geniusofdespair@yahoo.com

Anonymous said...

Craig has hit the nail right on the head.

It's not the boogeyman "Global Warming", it's fertilizers and minerals in the water that flows through the Everglades, into Florida Bay, and then through the cuts out into the Atlantic side of the Keys.

The only problem is, when they go through with the plan to elevate whatever portion of Alligator Alley, the end up doing, they're going to release even more mineral and fertilizer rich water through the everglades, into the bay, and eventually towards the reef.

The end result, maybe 20 years out, may be better sheet water flow to the everglades. But, those first 20 years of flushing all the crap from just south of the lake, through the everglades ecosystem, is going to be a very bad detox.

The reefs are likely to get worse before they get better

moderate

by the way craig. if you're invoved with the groups that have been doing the coral and fish counts down off of the keys, you're more than likely spending time with "brother of moderate".

Anonymous said...

selam/peace from eritrea.
our red sea coral thrives at up to 98f, making us the home, in the words of a leading coral expert that recently visited, the future nursery of the coral reef rehab movement...bbc/discovery channel had a crew here in march for a late dec/early jan special
if you know anyone interested in more on this pass on my email, i have a home on the coast and am in the coral reef business...

keep up the good work,
thomas c mountain
thomascmountain@yahoo.com
asmara ph 29 11 184822

Anonymous said...

selam/peace from eritrea.
our red sea coral thrives at up to 98f, making us the home, in the words of a leading coral expert that recently visited, the future nursery of the coral reef rehab movement...bbc/discovery channel had a crew here in march for a late dec/early jan special
if you know anyone interested in more on this pass on my email, i have a home on the coast and am in the coral reef business...

keep up the good work,
thomas c mountain
thomascmountain@yahoo.com
asmara ph 29 11 184822

Anonymous said...

Pictures can be found at:
http://www.reefreliefarchive.org/cgi-local/ImageFolio31/imageFolio.cgi