Scientists announced today the discovery of reef
structures they believe double the size of the
Southern Atlantic Ocean’s largest and richest reef
system, the Abrolhos Bank, off the southern coast of
Brazil’s Bahia state. The newly discovered area is
also far more abundant in marine life than the
previously known Abrolhos reef system, one of the
world’s most unique and important reefs.
Researchers from Conservation International (CI),
Federal University of Espírito Santo and Federal
University of Bahia announced their discovery in a
paper presented today at the International Coral Reef
Symposium in
Fort Lauderdale.
“We had some clues from local fishermen that other
reefs existed, but not at the scale of what we
discovered,” says Rodrigo de Moura, Conservation
International Brazil marine specialist and co-author
of the paper. “It is very exciting and highly unusual
to discover a reef structure this large and harboring
such an abundance of fish,” he adds.
The Abrolhos Bank is considered one of the
world’s most important reefs because it harbors a high
number of marine species found only in
Brazil
including species of soft corals, mollusks and fish
found only in the Abrolhos shelf. The Mussismilia
coral genus, a relic group remnant of an ancient coral
fauna dating back to the Tertiary period that went
extinct long ago elsewhere in the Atlantic, is the
dominant coral of the Abrolhos reef, which is
structured in unique mushroom-like shapes.
Researchers mapped the new reef structures in
areas ranging from nine to 124 miles (15 to 200 km)
off the coast and in depths ranging from 60 to 220
feet (20 to 73 meters) using a side scan sonar which
produces a three-dimensional map of the marine
seabed.
“Due to their relative inaccessibility and depth,
the newly discovered reefs are teeming with life, in
some places harboring 30 times the density of marine
life than the known, shallower reefs,” says Guilherme
Dutra, Conservation International’s director of marine
programs in
Brazil.
“That’s the good news. The bad news is that only a
small percentage of marine habitats in the Abrolhos
are protected, despite mounting localized and global
threats.”
Localized threats include over-fishing, coastal
development and large scale land conversion to
agriculture, shrimp farms, pollution, oil drilling and
sedimentation. Global threats include climate change
and ocean acidification.
Researchers acknowledged the conservation
effectiveness of the present network of Marine
Protected Areas in the Abrolhos. But it is very
limited and not nearly enough vis-à-vis the mounting
threats, they added.
The next phase of the Abrolhos project will be to
study the marine life in the new reef structures.
“These studies reveal the complexity and
connectivity of the reefs in the Abrolhos region and
will support conservation planning,” states Guilherme
Dutra.
The studies are part of the Marine Management
Area Science Program coordinated by CI with the
participation of research institutions around the
world, and supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore
Foundation and individual donors.
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Source:-Conservation
International Published on
18th July 2008
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