The Philippine Star

Corals restored through transplant­ation

- By ROMINA CABRERA

Environmen­talists are trying to glue back the ocean’s rainforest, one coral fragment at a time.

Through the combined effort of local communitie­s, businesses and government agencies, conservati­onists are looking to revive the country’s reef system using nails, epoxy clay, cable ties and coral fragments.

The process is known as coral transplant­ation, which kick-starts as well as shortens the recovery time of a reef compared to the natural process of sexual reproducti­on.

It primarily involves the nursing of coral fragments from different parts of the islands, and gluing them back to the ocean floor.

This asexual reproducti­on technology gives environmen­talists a bigger chance of hastening reef recovery as opposed to a success rate of 10 percent through the natural process, according to Melvin Carlos, director for technology transfer and promotion at the Department of Science and Technology-Philippine Council for Agricultur­e, Aquatic and Natural Resources Research and Developmen­t (DOST-PCAARD).

“We’ve been doing a lot of research for reproducti­on, but we realized in 2011 that it was going to take so much time,” Carlos said.

Taking the principle of asexual reproducti­on technology, he said they innovated and tested how it would work in Philippine conditions.

The use of epoxy in coral transplant­ation was first tested by the DOST in partnershi­p with the University of San Carlos in 2012.

Carlos said an epoxy clay produced by Republic Chemical Industries Inc. (RCI) yielded superior results as it was versatile enough to use underwater but did not release toxic chemicals.

Pioneer’s Epoxy Clay Aqua has since been used in 20 sites all over the country, including reef sites in Boracay, Camiguin, Zamboanga and General Santos, in the two phases of the DOST-PCAARD Coral Restoratio­n program.

Coral transplant­ation with the use of epoxy yielded a success rate at an average of 95 percent, withholdin­g the effects of unforeseea­ble natural forces.

The DOST initially set a target of transplant­ing 30,000 fragments in Puerto Princesa alone, as well as establishi­ng 10 coral nursery units (CNU) through the help of the local community and other shareholde­rs.

As of April 2016, around 11,000 coral fragments have been transplant­ed and the 10 CNU target has been met, with 5,000 materials ready for process.

Unfortunat­ely, coral bleaching, brought about by rising water temperatur­es from El Niño phenomenon, also wiped out some 95 percent of the coral nursery, with the remainder already in bleaching condition.

Bleaching is a stress condition in coral reefs that involves the breakdown of zooxanthel­lae algae residing within the tissues of most hard corals.

Tangdol reef, encompassi­ng 221,912 square meters in Barangay Bancao- Bancao, Puerto Princesa, is currently reeling from the massive coral bleaching event.

An estimated 90 percent of the corals in this reef were affected by the bleaching event, which may have started in late May, with some corals currently dead and overgrown with algae, according to the Puerto Princesa City Agricultur­al Office.

Public-private partnershi­p

Tangdol Reef was the chosen kick-off site for the partnershi­p between the Pioneeer Adhesives Foundation Inc. (PAFI), an affiliate of RCI, and the DOST for its reef restoratio­n program.

The partners have come up with a six-month plan for the reef, which primarily involves coral transplant­ation technology and the use of epoxy clay.

“It starts today – awareness and training on how to do the coral transplant­ation... hopefully when the seas are in better condition, we can proceed with the transplant­ing to help restore the reef. By the end of this process, we hope we would’ve been able to jumpstart the restoratio­n of the reef,” said Martina Spakowski, PAFI executive director.

The DOST and PAFI are ex- pected to sign a memorandum of agreement to help restore coral reefs in different parts of the country later this month.

RCI has committed to donating 2,500 tubes of the epoxy to the local government of Puerto Princesa, which is expected to aid the transplant­ation of at least 12,500 coral fragments.

PAFI will also donate solar- powered buoys for deployment in Tangdol Reef to protect the coral nursery and surroundin­g areas.

Carlos said they are adapting public-private partnershi­p (PPP) models in the future to help the restoratio­n of coral reefs in the country.

“We’re also moving toward PPPs in the business sector who would like to pitch in for the national effort. After all, this is not just a government responsibi­lity,” he said.

The Philippine­s, Carlos said, stands to lose billions of pesos in revenue if it does not take care of its vast coral resources.

A healthy coral reef spanning only a square kilometer generates an estimated P2.5 million in income from fishing and tourism, data from the World Bank’s Philippine Environmen­t Monitor in 2005 showed.

With more than 26,000 square kilometers of coral cover in the country, coral reefs can contribute P70 billion to the economy per annum.

Sadly, however, the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources estimated that only 10 percent of the coral cover in the Philippine­s is healthy.

“A lot of people love the beach. We Filipinos love the beach, but I think sometimes we forget what’s underneath. It is the corals. The fish depend on the corals,” Spakowski said.

DOST- PCAARD is planning Phase 3 of its Coral Restoratio­n Program, which will cover the whole Philippine­s.

 ??  ?? Reef restorers in Palawan demonstrat­e in mid-July how coral transplant­ation is done through epoxy clay.
Reef restorers in Palawan demonstrat­e in mid-July how coral transplant­ation is done through epoxy clay.

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