Scientists Issue
Strongest Coral Warning
September 26, 2006 — By Mat Probasco, Associated Press
CHARLOTTE AMALIE, U.S. Virgin Islands —
Scientists have issued their strongest warning so far this year that
unusually warm Caribbean Sea temperatures threaten coral reefs that
suffered widespread damage last year in record-setting heat.
Waters have reached 85 degrees around the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto
Rico -- temperatures at which coral can be damaged if waters do not cool
after a few weeks -- said Al Strong, a scientist with the U.S. National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Coral Reef Watch, in a telephone
interview Monday.
The warning issued Saturday by NOAA urges scuba-dive operators and
underwater researchers in the U.S. Caribbean territories to look for coral
damage and use caution around the fragile reefs, which are easily damaged
by physical contact.
Coral, which provide a sheltered habitat for fish, lobsters and other
animals, die from prolonged bleaching, when the water temperature gets so
high that it kills the algae that populate and build the reefs.
The new warning follows two watches issued since July.
Strong said the water was not expected to become as warm as last year,
when sea temperatures in the territories hovered near 86 degrees for
months at a time and as much as 40 percent of the coral died around the
U.S. Virgin Islands.
He said researchers were monitoring how the heat affects coral recovery
from last year.
"There is still so much to learn about the physiology of coral" and which
species recover fastest, Strong said in a telephone interview from
Maryland.
Scientists have not pinpointed what is behind the warm sea temperatures
but some speculate global warming might be the cause.
Millions of people visit the Caribbean each year to dive and snorkel over
the region's coral reefs, part of a multibillion-dollar tourism industry.
Source: Associated Press