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  • 12
    Nov
    2012
    4:41pm, EST

    Understanding the beauty and diversity of Raja Ampat, aka 'Underwater Eden'

    Romeo Gacad / AFP - Getty Images

    Rock formations are seen in Kabui Bay in Raja Ampat, eastern Indonesia's Papua region, in October 2011.

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News

    RAJA AMPAT, Indonesia — Throughout time, explorers have combed the farthest reaches of the world for that one shot of discovering new life.

    Dr. Mark Erdmann has taken that shot 89 times.

    Since coming to Indonesia in 1992 as a young Ph.D. student from the University of California Berkeley, Dr. Erdmann has been deeply immersed in the exploration and conservation of the underwater worlds of Indonesia and South East Asia, helping to discover 89 species across the region.

    His interest in Raja Ampat — an archipelago of over 1,500 small islands in Western Papua — started while living in a small fishing community in South Sulawesi, where his local fishermen neighbors regularly came back from fishing trips speaking of reefs teeming with fish and sharks.

    Conservation International works with Indonesian children to help them learn how to protect the most diverse underwater region in the world.  NBC News' Richard Engel reports.

    Scientists rush to save manta rays, the 'pandas of the ocean'

    In 2002, he finally got his chance to visit Raja Ampat when he was sent to assess the marine biology diversity of this mysterious region and determine if it was worth conservation.

    What he found floored him.

    PhotoBlog: Raja Ampat archipelago: The world's last paradise


    Romeo Gacad / AFP - Getty Images

    Starfish on a bed of sea grass in the waters of Raja Ampat's Mansuar Island. Called the last paradise on earth, Raja Ampat's largely pristine environment is considered as one of the most important sites of marine biodiversity in the world.

    With more than 600 species of coral, 42 fish species native to the region and an astounding record of 374 fish species identified on just one dive, Raja Ampat was a veritable gold mine of exciting new marine life.

    Earlier this year, NBC News joined Dr. Erdmann, now the senior advisor to Conservation International’s Indonesia marine program, as he plunged into the waters of Raja Ampat to discover his 89th species — a local snapper — and to survey the stunning seascape many have dubbed an “Underwater Eden.” 

    On patrol with a shark ranger in Indonesia's marine treasure trove

    He took time to answer questions about the scientific significance of Raja Ampat, his experiences as a marine biologist in the region and modern conservation strategies.

    Q: Why is Raja Ampat so ecologically important? 

    A: I’d say that anyone that dives here recognizes immediately after just a couple days that there is a tremendous variety of habitats here. Every dive site looks different, every habitat has its own unique suite of species and that makes this just such a unique place.

    It is the global epicenter of marine diversity in the world. This region has over 600 species of coral. By comparison the entire Caribbean Sea has only 58 species. So you are looking at 10 times the number of species in a much smaller area. Raja Ampat has 1,669 species of fish recorded to date and that total keeps rising every couple weeks. That number is far greater than the Great Barrier Reef, which is also a much larger area.

    There is simply nowhere else on the planet that has this many species, so that’s certainly one very important aspect. But another factor that we think is also very important is our research here has shown this coral is also pre-adapted to climate change. They are regularly subjected to variations in temperature from 19-degrees to 36-degrees Celsius, a 17-degree range, which by any textbook no coral survive.

    But if you look at the coral here, they are obviously quite happy. That says to us that the coral here is naturally adapted to massive fluctuations in temperature that are far higher than the ones predicted by climatologists over the next 50 years.

    As such, we look at Raja Ampat as a coral bank which we anticipate we will be able to one day reseed reefs in the surrounding regions that aren’t quite as adaptable and eventually succumb to climate change.

    Q: Why should people outside of Raja Ampat and scuba enthusiasts care about this place?

    A: As the epicenter of marine biodiversity, Raja Ampat is essentially a giant repository for the raw material needed for adaptation to global change, so it’s actually really important. We have coral here that will survive climate change and they will be able to reseed coral areas that are not as lucky and don’t adapt to the coming changes in climate.

    We have sponges, coral and other marine organisms that may very well hold the cure to anything from AIDS, to malaria to tuberculosis. The biomedical potential here is tremendous and totally untapped. The thought that you would allow that to go extinct or go through complete decimation before we have seen what it’s all worth, is not a prudent way forward.

    This is absolutely a global priority from that perspective. By simply protecting Raja Ampat, you protect 75 percent of the coral species. You can’t do that from anywhere else in the world.

    Q: You’ve been in this area for 21 years; do you still feel like there is something new to be discovered? Is the best yet to come?

    A: The number of new discoveries here has definitely stabilized. If we started to push deeper, the number of new species would start to increase again. Also if we started to expand into other regions around Raja Ampat and Eastern Indonesia that have not been surveyed as well, I think we would absolutely pick up a number of new species there too.

    Q: Can you talk about some of the discoveries you’ve have made here?

    A: The snapper we found on this trip is No. 89 in terms of new fish species I’ve discovered in Southeast Asia, many of them in collaboration with Dr. Gerry Allen. In Western Papua (where Raja Ampat is located) alone, I discovered 56 of those species.

    My favorite discovery here was a tilefish I found in 2006 that I still remember fondly. This tilefish was a beautiful deep-water species that builds these massive rubble mounds that can be up to a meter high and 2.5 meters across. I remember well it was a deep fish, living at about 60 meters.

    I saw the fish and knew it was a new species, but I didn’t have any way to bring proof to the surface because I didn’t have a camera with me. So I found Gerry Allen at the surface and I said to him “I found this beautiful tilefish with tiger stripes!” He looked at me very skeptically and said back, “I think you’re imagining these stripes, sometimes they look like that underwater. “   I told him there were definitely stripes and he basically responded that he wouldn’t believe me until I speared one.

    We were only in this area for one day and I really didn’t want to make another dive. But I wanted that fish, so I went back down and speared it, which isn’t easy because they are quite small. The problem though was that as I was coming up to do my recompression stop, I looked down at the fish and it was dying, making its stripes and colors disappear.

    Without the stripes, it looks like a more common species of tilefish that Gerry had mentioned.

    So there I was, trying to keep this fish alive so that the stripes wouldn’t go away before I got to the surface. I finally made it, Gerry saw the stripes and we decided to name the fish after me.

    Q: Is Raja Ampat under threat? By what?

    A: It is absolutely under threat. The main threats used to be marine-based — cyanide and bomb fishing — but increasingly as we have brought those problems under control, the threats are coming from land-based developments, including coastal mining (predominantly nickel) and irresponsible construction of “roads to nowhere” that hug the coastline with no buffer.

    For example, if the local government is building a road and they come across a little stream, they don’t build a bridge, they just plough over it. That generates a lot of mud that gets dumped into the ocean when it rains. They also build these roads on impossibly deep slopes, which often when finished even a motorcycle can’t get over.

    The roads and mines create an incredible amount of sediment that gets into the ocean and smothers coral reefs, killing them. Once you kill this coral, it’s very hard to bring it back. It would literally take multiple massive storms to clear the sediment from affected areas.

    As far as marine-based threats, there is still some bomb fishing going on. Though the shark sanctuary created here has largely been successful in revitalizing the shark population in Raja Ampat, it has also turned this area into an increasingly hotter target.

    Right now there are more sharks here than anywhere else in eastern Indonesia, so Raja Ampat is where people want to go to shark fin.

    Q: Conservation International is involved in a number of conservation programs here in the Raja Ampat area to deal with such issues and to educate the local population. Can you talk about your presence here and what you do?

    A: We’ve been working intensively in Raja Ampat since 2004 and currently have just over 100 staff members based here. They are strongly focused on setting up and running this network of marine parks around Raja Ampat. They are predominantly ethnic Papuans that we have recruited from the local population here and we have done our best to train them to become professional conservationists and marine park rangers.

    The vast majority of our efforts go into maintaining these parks that include the community patrols and a number of economic livelihood programs such as helping villages transition from sea turtle catching to raising pigs.

    Another important aspect of our program is the Kalabia marine conservation education program. The Kalabia is a floating education center that travels from village to village around Raja Ampat to basically educate the elementary school children in this area on marine conservation issues.

    In the class we teach the kids lessons like why bomb fishing is such a horrible thing, why shark fining is bad for the ecology, how badly designed roads kill coral and how to properly dispose of trash in these areas where there is no governmental trash disposal system.

    We also do engagement with the tourism sector to promote the expansion of sustainable tourism in Raja Ampat.

    Q: Helping fishermen transition from turtle hunters to pig farmers, educating Raja Ampat’s youth — to a certain extent aside from your role as a marine biologist and conservationist, do you also view yourself as a social engineer?

    A: When we talk about conservation, the public frequently thinks it’s about saving species, but in reality conservation is about changing people’s behavior. So unquestionably, if you are going to successfully do conservation, you have to be a social engineer.

    The threat to these species has always been human based, so you need to focus on the humans. You need to understand what’s important for these people and then try to design a program that will change their behavior but one they will be happy with.

    Absolutely, livelihoods are an extremely important element of what we do. We need to be concerned about the state of the local population’s economy, health care and food security because assisting with these factors are absolutely critical to gaining the support of locals for conservation.

    So whatever we do, we need to address those aspects that most concern the local communities. It’s only by addressing those issues that we are going to get to conservation going.

    Q: Is there room for another young aspiring Mark Erdmann in Raja Ampat?

    A: Absolutely! It’s time for another one. It’s good to come to a program like Conservation International’s with a good marine science program. But you need to realize that if you really want to do conservation, it’s increasingly more and more about real social engagement.

    We urgently need people who have a strong scientific background and understanding, but at the same time are interested in working with the local communities to help them better manage their natural resources like reefs and forests. 

    14 comments

    There is a disconnect between the story of the tilefish and his reported desire to preserve the ecosystem. If you dive without a camera and see a new species, you should let the fish live instead of spearing it so you can name it after yourself.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: indonesia, fish, environment, coral, featured, ecosystem, raja-ampat, mark-erdmann
  • 26
    Oct
    2012
    4:40pm, EDT

    Great Barrier Reef's coral crisis could find help in deeper waters

    Caitlin Seaview Survey

    This was among the healthy coral found in deep waters below Australia's Great Barrier Reef during the October 2012 work by the Caitlin Seaview Survey.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    A robot diving deeper than any human diver has found that coral deep below Australia’s Great Barrier Reef is very healthy even though the shallower coral is suffering from storms, warming seas and pollution. The robot’s handlers hope the deeper coral will provide the "recruits" needed to naturally repair the shallower reefs.

    "Up until now our knowledge was limited to the shallow reefs accessible by scuba diving," Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, chief scientist for the Catlin Seaview Survey, said in a statement announcing the findings. "In reality, that provided us with an incomplete picture."

    The remote-operated vehicle, he added, allows scientists to study coral at depths between 90 and 300 feet, "revealing a wholly different picture which now includes the deep reef environment."


    John Bruno, a University of North Carolina coral expert not associated with the survey, welcomed the work. "This is a popular idea," he said of deeper coral providing a refuge, "just not well tested."

    Caitlin Seaview Survey

    The robot used by the Caitlin Seaview Survey takes a sample from a deepwater area of Australia's Great Barrier Reef during its October 2012 work.

    Carden Wallace, a coral expert at the Museum of Tropical Queensland, added that it's not only the abundance but the diversity that surprised her. "Using the ROVs to film and collect samples at this scale is simply unprecedented in Australian waters," Wallace said.

    That diversity includes corals that "are much flatter, more plate-like than the branching and domed shapes seen nearer the surface," said Pim Bongaerts of the University of Queensland’s Global Change Institute. "This is the corals responding to the reduced light conditions and spreading out to maximize their exposure to light.

    "So far below the surface, the light is blue because all other parts of the spectrum have been filtered out," Bongaerts added. "It is a monochrome world until you turn on strong lights to reveal amazing, beautiful, fantastic colors."

    Seaview Survey, in partnership with Google, has been capturing 360-degree views of famous coral reefs. NBC's Savannah Guthrie reports.

    The layer of coral just below the shallow reefs could be the key to repairing the reef system.

    It "could provide coral recruits for the upper levels of the reef, providing a potential for them to help in the recovery," Bongaerts said. "At the moment we know little about the extent of larval movements between the shallow and deep reef, but we are seeing species that exist in both zones."

    Related: 'Major decline' in Great Barrier Reef coral
    Related: 360-degree views of Great Barrier Reef

    Bruno was optimistic that nature would play a role in recovery. "The deep water habitats can/will be a sort of refuge," he told NBC News, calling it "a natural source to repopulate shallow habitats that have been more affected by warming, bleaching, disease, storms, etc."  

    Caitlin Seaview Survey

    A starfish sits on storm-damaged coral in shallow waters of Australia's Great Barrier Reef.

    The findings come a month after the Australian Institute of Marine Science reported that the Great Barrier Reef has lost half its shallow-reef coral cover in the last 27 years. 

    The Catlin team, for its part, is planning six more surveys along the 1,600-mile-long reef system. It plans to later study reef systems around the world, using ROVs as well as cameras with 360-degree views. 

    Slideshow: Take a virtual dive

    See dozens of wonders from coral reefs and other exotic seascapes, courtesy of the Catlin Seaview Survey.

    Launch slideshow

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    21 comments

    To me, it just says. The deep sea inhabitants, will be the last to die. I call it, trickle down pollution.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: global-warming, environment, climate-change, coral, great-barrier-reef
  • 7
    Sep
    2012
    4:06pm, EDT

    Coral in Caribbean, Florida in sharp decline, 'no signs of slowing,' report finds

    Florida's coral reefs have been decimated in recent decades. Underwater coral "nurseries" are one approach being used to recolonize coral there.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    Reefs in the Caribbean and Florida Keys have lost most of the colorful corals that feed a rich ecosystem and made the region a diving and snorkeling mecca, a major conservation group reported Friday. On average, reefs have live coral on just 8 percent of their surface area, down from more than 50 percent in the 1970s.

    Impacts including warming seas and human sewage have contributed to a steady decline that shows "no signs of slowing," the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) said in releasing its report, which was based on new data compiled by 36 experts earlier this year.

    The decline was not uniform, the IUCN noted, and those areas with less human impact fared better. "Corals declined precipitously on the Jamaican north coast in the 1980s ... but not at Curacao and Bonaire where coral has more gently declined to about 25-30% today," the IUCN said in the report.

    In contrast, total coral cover in the Florida Keys, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico "has progressively declined from 25 to 35% in the 1970s to less than 15% today."


    Many of those severely deteriorated reefs instead are covered with large algae, which make it harder for coral to get established, "and virtually no fish larger than" a few inches, the report stated.

    The report cited a number of factors causing the decline: disease, pollution, overfishing, hurricanes and "coral bleaching" — a process triggered by stress such as warm seas or pollution whereby the coral expels the tiny single-celled algae inside it that provide its color.

    The IUCN did not try to weigh the importance of each factor, but some experts voiced their belief that global warming is paramount.

    John Bruno, a University of North Carolina marine biologist who contributed to the new data, told NBC News that a study published last July shows the key driver in the decline is a warming ocean.

    "Our preliminary analysis suggests that the state of Caribbean reefs continues to worsen, primarily due to ocean warming," he said. "To reverse this dire trend, job one is to halt the increase of greenhouse gas emissions."

    Related: Study ties coral crisis to climate change
    Related: Slideshow on threats to coral

    The IUCN released the report at its annual convention and urged nations to step up efforts to reduce fossil fuel reliance, thereby reducing greenhouse gases. It also called on nations with coral reefs in their waters to take several actions:

    • Limit fishing through catch quotas;
    • Create or extend marine protected areas, which provide havens for coral and fish populations to recover;
    • Halt runoff from land of sewage and fertilizers, among other pollutants.

    The impacts on coral must be "immediately and drastically" reduced, said Carl Gustaf Lundin, director of IUCN’s Global Marine and Polar Program, "if coral reefs and the vitally important fisheries that depend on them are to survive in the decades to come."

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    152 comments

    I live in Tampa and grew up in Homestead, Florida. The impact that humans have on our ecosystems have been getting progressively worse for decades. Fertilizer needs to be banned unless a person or farmer tests the soil to see exactly what is needed and then only apply the needed amount. All too ofte …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: global-warming, environment, climate-change, coral, oceans, reefs
  • 5
    Jul
    2012
    6:18pm, EDT

    Coral clues to climate: Reefs vanished for 2,500 years

    Richard B. Aronson

    Ian Macintyre, left, of the Smithsonian Institution and Steven Vollmer of Northeastern University pull out a core sample for the coral study they were co-authors on.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    Coral reefs along Panama's Pacific coast completely collapsed for 2,500 years due to natural climate cycles, researchers reported in a study Thursday, adding that there's a lesson in the data for man-made climate change: ease up on greenhouse gasses and reefs will restore themselves.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    "We can prevent coral reefs from shutting down again or recover them if they do shut down by reducing concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere and the ocean," study co-author Richard Aronson, a biology professor at Florida Institute of Technology, told msnbc.com.

    The researchers reconstructed 6,000 years of coral reef history by driving pipes into reefs to pull out core samples. 


    "We were shocked to find that 2,500 years of reef growth were missing," Lauren Toth, the lead author and a doctoral student, said in a statement announcing the study in the journal Science. 

    The team found the same gap in earlier studies by other researchers as far away as Australia and Japan, and tied the collapse to an intensification of the natural climate cycle that produces El Nino and La Nina weather events.

    Aronson emphasized that the fact that coral reefs returned does not mean mankind can expect them to survive a climate made warmer by industrial emissions of carbon dioxide.

    "It is quite the opposite," he said. "Environmental pressure caused the reef ecosystems to collapse, and relieving that pressure allowed recovery."

    "The same message," he added, "applies to human-caused climate change: by changing the climate we are stressing corals and coral-reef ecosystems, and we will have to stop doing that if we are going to save the reefs."

    John Bruno, a marine biology professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said the study is valuable for showing that the biggest threat facing coral reefs is climate change.

    Lauren T. Toth

    This coral on Panama's Pacific coast was bleached by a 2010 warming event triggered by El Nino.

    "Our modern coral reefs are supremely sensitive to subtle changes in climate even in the absence of local impacts like fishing and pollution," he wrote in a commentary for msnbc.com.

    "In other words, in contrast to what has been argued in a number of high profile essays, reefs do not have to be overfished and polluted to be harmed by climatic fluctuations," wrote Bruno, who was not involved in the study.

    "Everyone agrees that overfishing, particularly the depletion of predators from coral reef ecosystems, is an enormous, global problem," he added. "But the current science indicates that this problem is largely unrelated to the climate change problem. We urgently need to tackle both problems -- simultaneously and with equal vigor and commitment. Unfortunately, solving one will not negate the other."

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    102 comments

    So who did they blame for climate change then? Oh right, no one. There were no politicians around to lie about everything. If you took politics out of the pollution problem it would get solved. Maybe we need to reduce political pollution to actually get things done.

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    Explore related topics: global-warming, environment, climate-change, coral, featured, miguel-llanos

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