Coral Restoration with Biorock
By Mallika Naguran Photos by Tom Goreau and Club Aqua He
is a pained man on a mission. Dr Thomas J Goreau is sickened with
seeing widespread and massive destruction of coral reefs that were once
resplendent underwater rainforests, a joy to fishes and fishermen alike.
And he has no choice but to act as the value of reefs is immeasurable.
"Coral
reefs provide most of the marine biodiversity, fisheries, shore
protection, and tourism for over 100 countries. All of this depends on
having healthy corals. No other organism can do this," says Tom.
The
President of the Global Coral Reef Alliance (GCRA) is charged up to
reverse the situation with a bit of help from technology.
"To
restore reefs we must eliminate the stresses that damage corals and use
new methods to grow them faster and more resistant to stress" he
says.
Technology To Help Grow CoralTom has
an illustrious career. He was previously Senior Scientific Affairs
Officer at the United Nations Centre for Science and Technology for
Development, in charge of global climate change and biodiversity
issues, and has published around 200 papers in areas such as coral reef
ecology, changes in global ocean circulation, tropical deforestation
and reforestation and mathematical modeling of climate records.
Tom
developed the method to predict the location, timing, and severity of
coral bleaching from satellite data with Ray Hayes. In 1990 Tom formed
GCRA, a non-profit organization for coral reef protection and
sustainable management, with a network of volunteer scientists, divers,
environmentalists and organizations.
Using technology as a
means, essentially Biorock that was invented by the late Wolf Hilbertz,
they address the needs ofCorals grow three to five times faster with
Biorock. coral reef restoration, marine diseases and issues caused by
global climate change, environmental stress and pollution.
The
method allows reefs to survive and recover from damage caused by
excessive nutrients, climate change, and physical destruction. To build
a Biorock reef, a low voltage electrical current is passed through a
conductive frame that’s anchored to the seabed. Power can be sourced
from chargers, windmills, solar panels or tidal current generators.
The
electrolytic reaction causes mineral crystals such as calcium carbonate
and magnesium hydroxide found in seawater to grow on the structure.
Within days, a whitish hue that is made up of precipitated minerals
coat the structure’s surface – a sign that the wired frame is ready for
action.
Divers then begin transplanting coral fragments from
other reefs and attach them to the frame. The coral pieces begin to
bond to the accreted mineral substrate immediately and start to grow at
a rate up to five times faster than usual. Soon the frame with dotted
corals becomes a habitat for a reef ecosystem, attracting colonizing
marine life such as fish, crabs, clams, octopus, lobster, and sea
urchins.
"In the Maldives during the 1998 warming, fewer than 5%
of the natural reef corals survived. But on our GCRA reefs, 80% of
corals not only survived, they flourished," says Tom.
Corals
from these reefs are now recolonizing the surrounding natural habitats,
I am told. GCRA reefs are growing vibrantly in Thailand, Indonesia,
Papua New Guinea, Panama, and Mexico.
Growing Up Among Corals Tom,
growing up in Jamaica was swimming as soon as he could walk. "I have
dived longer and in more reefs around the world than any coral
scientist," says Tom, previously Senior Scientific Affairs Officer at
the United Nations Centre for Science and Technology for Development.
Tom
could very well have coral DNA in his cell structure as his father
Thomas F Goreau was the first diving marine scientist, researching on
coral ecology in 1948. Grandpa Fritz Goreau was notable too for
pioneering underwater photography using self-made underwater cameras
and breathing dive apparatus.
They took the first high quality photographs of Coral Reef organisms in the Central Pacific, Bahamas, and the Great Barrier Reef among other locations.
"When
I was young we would travel around Jamaica where my father would show
his underwater photographs to fishermen and tell them why the reefs
were disappearing and in danger. So it is just something I grew
up doing and had the fortune of learning from the person who knew the
most about coral reefs," says Tom.
"I continue only because no
one else has this background, experience and knowledge, and somebody
has to maintain it," he adds, in spite of losing parts of his hand to a
barracuda attack in 2004, which has since been reconstructed.
"There
is almost no place that my grandfather, father, or I knew in the past
that is not heartbreakingly damaged, many so badly ruined that there is
just no trace at all left of the reefs, not even rubble. Most of those
who live in those areas now don't even realize what they have lost," he
frowns.
Seeing is BelievingIn spite of evidence that
coral reefs are thriving thanks to Biorock where they were once
bleached, dead or crushed, the path chosen to save coastal reefs using
this proven technology is full of rocks.
"As a career choice,
it has been suicidal to be in a field where there is no funding - it is
impossible to survive. I often wish I had not been obliged by
circumstance to have to do this and could have had a job that I would
be actually paid for."
Among the difficulties he encounters, Tom speaks about the lack of faith.
A
new reef is born where once barren. "No one believes what we do is
possible until they see it themselves. Growing bright coral reefs
swarming with fish in a few years in places that were barren deserts is
something everybody thinks can't be done, but has been done in nearly
30 countries with only small donations, mostly from local people who
remember how their reef used to be and realize they must grow more
corals now," he explains.
Describing local funding as "a drop in
the bucket", he urges the immediate resources from other sources.
"Until governments, big international funding agencies, the private
sector, and big international conservation groups realize that if we
don't have policies and funding to restore what we have lost, it will
very soon be too late."
MORE INFORMATION:Tom,
who is also the Coordinator of the United Nations Commission on
Sustainable Development Partnership in New Technologies for Small
Island Developing States, can be contacted at goreau@bestweb.net.
Visit his website at www.globalcoral.org
|
Article Contributed By Gaia Discovery.
|