Daily Dispatch

Plan to restore coral health

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CORAL bred in one part of the Great Barrier Reef was successful­ly transplant­ed into another area, Australian scientists said yesterday, in a project they hope could restore damaged ecosystems around the world.

In a trial at the reef’s Heron Island off Australia’s east coast, the researcher­s collected a large amount of coral spawn and eggs late last year, grew them into larvae and then transplant­ed them into areas of damaged reef.

When they returned eight months later, they found juvenile coral that had survived and grown, aided by underwater mesh tanks.

“The success of this new research not only applies to the Great Barrier Reef but has potential global significan­ce,” lead researcher Peter Harrison, of Southern Cross University, said.

“It shows we can start to restore and repair damaged coral population­s where the natural supply of coral larvae has been compromise­d.” Harrison said his mass larvalrest­oration approach contrasts with the current “coral gardening” method of breaking up healthy coral and sticking healthy branches on reefs in the hope they will regrow, or growing coral in nurseries before transplant­ation.

He was optimistic his approach, which was earlier successful­ly trialled in the Philippine­s in an area of reef highly degraded by blast fishing, could help reefs recover on a larger scale.

“The results are very promising and our work shows that adding higher densities of coral larvae leads to higher numbers of successful coral recruits,” he added.

The Great Barrier Reef, the largest living structure on Earth, is reeling from an unpreceden­ted secondstra­ight year of coral bleaching because of warming sea temperatur­es linked to climate change. — AFP

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? UNDER THREAT: An aerial view of the Great Barrier Reef along the central coast of Queensland
Picture: AFP UNDER THREAT: An aerial view of the Great Barrier Reef along the central coast of Queensland

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