The Telegram (St. John's)

Restoring degraded reefs

Thai marine biologists painstakin­gly breeding coral in labs

- NAPAT WESSHASART­AR

OFF MAN NAI ISLAND, Thailand - On a starry night, four Thai marine biologists scuba dived through shallow waters off an island in the country’s south as billions of pink specks floated up from the ocean floor in a spectacle that takes place only once a year.

The pink specks were sperm and eggs released by coral. The scientists collected as many samples as possible for breeding, as they fight to save Thailand’s expansive reefs from degradatio­n driven by warming oceans and human activity like tourism.

Their research is painstakin­g because the coral only spawn once a year, and it can take up to five years to raise the juveniles in a lab before they are ready to be transferre­d back onto the seabed.

“We have hope that the degraded coral reefs can recover and return to their former beauty,” said one scientist, Nantika Kitsom.

She added the loss of Thailand’s reefs doesn’t just pose a significan­t threat to the ocean ecosystem, but also to the country’s economy, as it impacts tourism and fisheries that depend on healthy coral habitats for fish population­s.

The coral breeding and restoratio­n project was started by Thailand’s Department of Marine and Coastal Resources in 2016 in the southern island of Man Nai, chosen because it houses over 98 species of coral.

The project came after as much as 90 per cent of Thailand’s coral reefs were affected by a mass bleaching event that started in 2010, most likely triggered by rising water temperatur­es. Since the project was initiated, more than 4,000 coral colonies around Mun Nai Island have been restored, the department said.

According to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, the world is on the verge of a fourth mass coral bleaching event that could see wide swathes of tropical reefs die.

 ?? REUTERS FILE ?? Marine biologists Thitiporn Khanauruxs, 28, and Nantika Kitsom, 29, remove aquatic vegetation from earthenwar­e tiles at a research centre on Man Nai Island, off the coast of southeaste­rn Rayong province, Thailand, February 29, 2024.
REUTERS FILE Marine biologists Thitiporn Khanauruxs, 28, and Nantika Kitsom, 29, remove aquatic vegetation from earthenwar­e tiles at a research centre on Man Nai Island, off the coast of southeaste­rn Rayong province, Thailand, February 29, 2024.
 ?? ?? Replenishe­d staghorn corals are seen in the waters off Man Nai Island, off the coast of southeaste­rn Rayong province, Thailand, February 28, 2024. REUTERS FILE
Replenishe­d staghorn corals are seen in the waters off Man Nai Island, off the coast of southeaste­rn Rayong province, Thailand, February 28, 2024. REUTERS FILE

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