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Waterborne Debris Could Devastate Region's Coral

The reefs are vital to the marine ecosystem and the tourist industry. Many were already threatened, making recovery less likely.

CATASTROPHE IN SOUTHERN ASIA

December 31, 2004|Charles Piller, Times Staff Writer

When giant tsunami waves smashed onto shores around the Indian Ocean on Sunday, they first killed tens of thousands of people. Then a massive backwash returned to sea carrying a deadly cargo that could destroy the region's vital coral reefs.

"The water picks up sediment, trees, buildings, cars, and brings them back across," said Clive Wilkinson, coordinator of the Global Coral Reef Monitoring Network in Australia. "It could pound the corals to sand."


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For now, officials and scientific experts in affected areas are focused primarily on aiding the survivors of the disaster.

"The first priority is obviously on helping the victims, the poorest of the poor.... They have lost everything," said Marco Noordeloos, manager of a reef-preservation project for the WorldFish Center, a research agency based in Penang, Malaysia, that promotes sustainable coastal development.

But as they think about longer-term implications, many scientists are anticipating devastation of reefs, coastal wetlands and the fish populations they support.

The tsunami hit reefs left vulnerable by global warming, increased tourist activity, and such local practices as the illegal but widespread use of explosives to kill or stun fish, known as "blast fishing."

"Coral reefs are already drastically affected by overfishing, pollution and disease, then a natural disaster is just another add-on to the litany of environmental insults," said Jeremy Jackson, a professor at Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego.

"In the past, a huge natural disturbance would be weathered in stride," he said. "But in a time when people are the greatest force working against the ecosystem," the giant tsunami could be a killer blow to some reefs.

Jamaica offers a case in point. Weakened by pollution, overfishing and tourism, the island's reefs never fully recovered from Hurricane Allen in 1980.

"Those coral reefs were waiting to die, and we were just not smart enough to see it," Jackson said. "Given what we've learned about the synergy between natural disturbance and human disturbance, the projection would have to be fairly grim."

Damage to the reefs could cause many problems. Not only are they a major tourist attraction in several South Asian countries, they also provide a hatchery for fish, making them a key link in ocean ecology.

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