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This article is from The Star Online (http://thestar.com.my)

URL:

http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2005/4/19/features/10534535 & sec=\

features

 

________________________

 

Tuesday April 19, 2005

Corals suffer blow

By ED CROPLEY

 

Three months after the Indian Ocean tsunami, divers are still pulling mattresses

and metal from the coral-lined bays of Thai paradise isles, although experts say

overall reef damage is not that bad.

 

However, in other countries hit by the Dec 26 killer wave, the delicate “rain

forests of the sea” have sustained injuries that could last for centuries.

 

“Corals grow very slowly, and many species suffered a blow on ‘Black Sunday’.

It will take them hundreds of years to acquire normal size again,” said D.V. Rao

of the Zoological Survey of India (ZSI).

 

Particularly hard hit were India’s remote Andaman and Nicobar islands, home to

around 175 coral species, where surveys have showed silt stirred by the tsunami

is choking the fragile ecosystems that attract thousands of tourists each year.

 

“Coral of this particular area did not suffer a direct blow from the tsunami,

but the deposition of sand, mud and other debris due to the tsunami is

threatening the corals,” said the ZSI’s Jaya Bhaskaran.

 

On the southern Thai island of Phi Phi – the backdrop to cult Leonardo di

Caprio movie The Beach – scores of backpackers and divers have started an ad hoc

clean-up operation to rid the bay of the worst of the debris swept into the sea.

 

Despite a daily haul of anything from corrugated iron roofing to tailor’s

dummies, dive operators are confident Phi Phi will retain its reputation as a

mecca for lovers of the underwater world.

 

“There’s some great diving out there at the moment. The visibility is amazing,”

said Steve Goff, an English dive-shop owner on Phi Phi.

 

 

 

Scientists said other prime-time reefs in Thailand, where a government marine

survey suggests only 13% of 174 sites had been severely affected, had also

escaped the worst of the impact.

 

James Conley of Britain-based Coral Cay Conservation, which has just completed

a study of the Similan Islands, a tropical chain 50km off the mainland,

described overall reef damage as “pretty much insignificant at the archipelago

level.”

 

“Human disturbance from before has left far greater damage than the tsunami,”

Conley said. “The tsunami was the worst that nature could have thrown at the

reefs, but they have bounced back,” he said.

 

Others hope the monsoon season, which starts around May, will help stir up the

water anew and wash tsunami sediment off the coral, allowing it to “breathe”

more easily.

 

“Getting rid of sediment is not easy, but monsoon storms and currents can

really help remove it,” said Niphon Phongsuwan, a Thai marine biologist on the

southern Thai resort island of Phuket.

 

In the remote Maldives archipelago 800km off the toe of India, coral reefs

still recovering from severe damage suffered during the 1998 El Nino had a lucky

escape.

 

The waters surrounding the idyllic chain of 1,200 tiny palm-fringed islands are

home to 8,920 sqkm of reef – or around 5% of the world’s coral – and have helped

turn the Maldives into a scuba diving paradise.

 

“While our reefs escaped direct damage, its fragility and sensitivity to even

slight climatic changes warrants the implementation of additional measures to

safeguard its health,” said Maldives President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom.

 

A report compiled by the Australian Government found that while there was

damage to coral and movement of sediments, they varied in intensity and overall

tsunami damage to the Maldives’ reefs was relatively minor.

 

“However, the report has pointed out that the tsunami had unfortunately

retarded the promising re-growth of our coral gardens after the 1998 El Nino

bleaching incident,” Gayoom added. – Reuters<p>

 

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