Enterprise-Record (Chico)

To combat coral bleaching, Kenya turns to reef nurseries

- By Wanjohi Kabukuru

WASINI, KENYA » Minutes away from the Kenyan mainland, the densely forested island of Wasini is one of several starting lines for coral reef restoratio­n efforts in the western Indian Ocean. On a rare calm day during the normally turbulent monsoon season, four divers, carrying measuring equipment, shoes and toothbrush­es descended in turns to the seabed reef restoratio­n site on the Shimoni channel.

“We use coral fragments collected from wild population­s to establish the nurseries,” said diver Yatin Patel, before slipping into the turquoise waters. “After growing, they’re taken to the coral garden.” Patel and his team, who are part of the REEFolutio­n foundation, clean the coral nurseries and measure the sizes of the growing corals, which are supported by plastic pipes and pyramid structured steel nets.

The marine area, jointly managed by the foundation and the island’s community, has been planting over 8,000 corals a year since 2012 and placed about 800 artificial reef structures in the channel in a bid to restore Wasini’s coral gardens. But the project is threatened by growing costs and a planned fishing port in Shimoni, a mere 3 kilometers (1.9 miles) away on Kenya’s coast.

The United Nation’s Ocean Conference, which begins Monday in Lisbon, Portugal, is set to put protection and restoratio­n efforts for coral reefs back on the agenda. Small island states and coastal African nations will be following up on access to “blue financing” mechanisms, including a $625 billion coral reef funding scheme aimed at protection and restoratio­n efforts as well as cushioning communitie­s who rely on oceans for their livelihood­s. Previous commitment­s to reef restoratio­n by the European Union and coral reef insurance will also be discussed.

The threat of waning fish population­s due to dying corals adds to the woes of east African communitie­s, millions of whom are already facing a worsening food crisis because of a prolonged drought in the east and Horn of Africa, as well as ripple effects from the war in Ukraine. In early March, the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change issued a dire warning on the threats faced by African coastal and island nations and a complete collapse of corals in the western Indian Ocean.

The Wasini Island coral initiative is one among many dotted across the Africa’s western shores, after a series of severe coral bleaching bouts due to warming ocean waters. After a particular­ly devastatin­g year in 1998, due in large part to the natural weather phenomenon El Nino, huge stretches of the Indian Ocean’s corals — from Somalia to the South Africa — were badly affected.

Coral bleaching occurs when extreme temperatur­es and sun glare simultaneo­usly trigger corals to flush out algae, causing them to turn white. Corals can survive bleaching events, but are under greater stress and can’t effectivel­y support marine life, threatenin­g the population­s that depend on them.

Tim McClanahan, a senior conservati­on zoologist at the Wildlife Conservati­on Society said that 1998 wasn’t the first such event — there was one in 1983, and since then there have been three in the past two decades, in 2005, 2010 and 2016. The prevalence of mass coral bleaching along the western Indian Ocean has worried scientists for decades and intensive studies to understand and map out interventi­ons to curb the phenomena are ongoing. Many of these bleaching events are directly linked to climate change, McClanahan said.

The Wasini coral restoratio­n project followed in the footsteps of Nature Seychelles, a conservati­on non-government­al organizati­on in the Seychelles archipelag­o which initiated the western Indian Ocean’s first coral replanting exercise in the same year and is still ongoing over a decade later. A similar project was undertaken in Tanzania.

But Wasini’s corals in particular are in bad shape, said McClanahan.

“There are some areas in Tanzania, Mozambique and Madagascar that are in better condition. We are working to protect those reefs,” he said. He argued that protection programs are much more successful than those that aim to restore badly bleached corals.

“We found it expensive and also over the long term many of the corals we planted died,” he said of the Wildlife Conservati­on Society’s coral restoratio­n attempts. “The restoratio­n efforts will not solve this big scale problem.”

The Wasini reefs restoratio­n project also faces the threat of destructio­n and pollution from the proposed constructi­on of a deep sea fisheries port in Shimoni. The port is one of the key pledges that the Kenyan government made at the first U.N. ocean summit in Nairobi in 2018 and will be reiterated during the follow-up summit in Lisbon on Monday.

 ?? BRIAN INGANGA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Coral reef restoratio­n ranger Yatin Patel measures an artificial reef structure in the Indian Ocean near Shimoni, Kenya on Monday.
BRIAN INGANGA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Coral reef restoratio­n ranger Yatin Patel measures an artificial reef structure in the Indian Ocean near Shimoni, Kenya on Monday.

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