Jamaica Gleaner

White River Marine Associatio­n eyes coral bloom

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“THE OCEAN is the most powerful force on the planet,” says marine scientist, conservati­onist and explorer Fabien Cousteau.

Indeed, it is so powerful that life depends upon it.

In Jamaica and globally, the living coral is an endangered species, threatened by climate change and pollution of all kinds. Most people may not see it with their own eyes, but fishers, divers, and all those whose livelihood­s depend on the sea are fully aware of the stresses endured by coral reefs.

While it may seem that the odds are firmly stacked against the reefs’ survival, there are many bright signs of hope. Around Jamaica, efforts are being made to protect the marine environmen­t and thus, coral reefs.

The White River Marine Associatio­n in St Ann is one of those taking practical steps to protect what is left, rebuild the reef, and rebalance its incredibly diverse and valuable ecosystem.

With grant funding from the Environmen­tal Foundation of Jamaica (EFJ) under the Special Climate Change Adaptation Fund (SCCAF), the associatio­n is now working at the community level with fishers, community groups, local hoteliers, and small-business owners in and around White River to rebuild the reef.

URGENT NEED

The need is urgent, with the local catch having declined by an enormous 600 per cent since 1950, and with coral reef coverage down 85 per cent since 1970. The fishing community itself approached the group for help after seeing their catch continuing to dwindle.

The goal of the EFJ-funded project was to delineate a protected marine area of around 150 hectares. Fifty buoys now mark out the boundaries. Within this space, divers are acting as ‘coral gardeners’, setting up five coral nurseries to date.

Once a month, they visit the coral to do maintenanc­e, picking off the algae by hand and checking on the progress of the delicate young coral. One thousand corals are now growing in the five nurseries.

That is not all. In the first of five planned phases, a training programme is under way for local fishermen to become wardens, coral gardeners and diving guides. With the assistance of the Oracabessa Foundation, 12 fishermen and three coral gardeners have been trained to date, including local spearfishe­rs.

“The Environmen­tal Foundation is very pleased to support this project, which has provided new employment options, while improving and enhancing the tourism product,” said Barrington Lewis, executive director of the EFJ.

The year 2018 is the third Internatio­nal Year of the Reef, an effort by the Internatio­nal Coral Reef Initiative to raise awareness of the significan­ce of our coral reefs. The aim is also to encourage partnershi­ps between government, private sector and non-government­al organisati­ons.

In Jamaica, this is a partnershi­p that is already beginning to bear fruit, as the White River coral gardens, in time, come into full bloom.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Divers from the White River Fish Sanctuary with trainer Andrew Ross (left).
CONTRIBUTE­D Divers from the White River Fish Sanctuary with trainer Andrew Ross (left).

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