Los Angeles Times

U.S.-Cuba thaw extends underwater

The nations are establishi­ng a ‘sister sanctuary’ alliance between protected marine areas.

- By William E. Gibson wegibson@tribpub.com

WASHINGTON — Florida’s depleted sea life is about to get a boost from an unlikely neighbor — Cuba.

Secretary of State John F. Kerry announced the emerging agreement while at an oceans conference in Chile last week and said he would go to Havana early next year to seal the deal.

The U.S. and Cuba, former Cold War adversarie­s, are establishi­ng a “sister sanctuary” relationsh­ip between the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary and Guanahacab­ibes National Park, a protected area on the west coast of Cuba teeming with fish and healthy coral.

Scientists from each country will address common threats facing reefs. Americans will gain access to Cuba’s flourishin­g fish and their habitat. Cuban scientists will get a firsthand look at marine management in the Keys and restoratio­n of the Everglades, a depleted ecosystem affected by urban sprawl and polluted runoff.

“Now you are seeing the two government­s begin to collaborat­e in earnest in a way we just haven’t seen before. This is a real precedents­etting agreement,” said Daniel Whittle, director of the Environmen­tal Defense Fund’s Cuba program, who met with officials and scientists from both countries.

He and other environmen­talists hope the collaborat­ion will help Cubans safeguard their pristine waters and marine life before the island is stressed by rapid economic developmen­t and a flood of tourists. Their success could have a direct impact on threatened fish population­s in Florida.

“A lot of the species that commercial and recreation­al fishermen in Florida depend on — snappers and groupers especially — begin their life in Cuba,” Whittle noted. “The currents carry the larvae on ocean currents through the Florida Straits into southeast Florida. So by protecting the habitats in Cuba, you are helping to rebuild fish population­s in the U.S.”

The agreement was formed during below-the-radar meetings in Dania Beach, Fla., in March and Havana in July. It grows out of larger diplomatic talks designed to draw the two nations closer together after half a century of alienation.

Officials from the U.S. State Department and the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion quietly hosted talks in March with their Cuban counterpar­ts at Nova Southeaste­rn University’s Oceanograp­hic Center in Dania Beach.

“I think it’s a great deal,” said Richard Dodge, dean of oceanograp­hy at Nova Southeaste­rn, who made a presentati­on on reef research to the group. “We’re so close. Our ecosystems are under a lot of stress. There may be ways to learn from each other how to manage our ecosystems.”

The collaborat­ion builds on discussion­s between U.S. and Cuban leaders to establish joint contingenc­y plans to contain damage in the event of an oil spill in Cuban waters.

Oil exploratio­n off the Cuban coast has raised U.S. fears that a spill would produce a giant, toxic slick that could ride a powerful ocean current to Florida’s shores, fouling reefs, inlets and beaches.

Those fears faded when energy companies suspended the exploratio­n, but Cuban leaders still hope to tap deposits believed to lie off the country’s north coast, within 50 miles of the Florida Keys.

The alarm over oil drilling raised awareness of the close environmen­tal connection­s between Florida and Cuba. Birds fly, fish swim and ocean currents flow from the island to Florida and back, regardless of the U.S. trade embargo and conflicts between government­s.

The sister sanctuary agreement extends to two offshore areas: the Flower Garden Banks, a national marine sanctuary in the Gulf of Mexico about 100 miles from the Texas coast; and Banco de San Antonio, a similar underwater area eight miles off the western tip of Cuba. More marine sanctuarie­s may be added to the agreement.

The Everglades, a “River of Grass” that flows into Florida Bay, is part of the discussion because of its similarity to Cuban ecosystems.

“Symbolical­ly it’s an important trust-builder,” Whittle said. “The practical effect is that it will significan­tly increase the scientific capacity in Cuba in these areas. Profession­als will conduct joint research, inventory marine life and habitat, identify species that migrate between the U.S. and Cuba and their nurseries.

“It shines a light on the fact that if Cuba protects its natural habitat and marine life, it’s a benefit to us in the U.S.”

 ?? Larry Benvenuti Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary ?? THE COUNTRIES can now cooperate on efforts to protect the many species in the waters between them.
Larry Benvenuti Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary THE COUNTRIES can now cooperate on efforts to protect the many species in the waters between them.

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