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Down Under |
Aussie experts in reef mission |
2005-01-09 |
AUSTRALIAN experts have been called on to rescue coral reefs and fisheries damaged in the Indian Ocean tsunami. A team led by the CSIRO will focus its attention on the Maldives, a string of 1200 coral atolls off the southwest coast of India, which was devastated by tidal waves caused by a massive undersea earthquake off northern Indonesia. Diving tourism and seafood are key industries for the Maldives, which is a popular holiday destination, particularly for Europeans. The offer was made after the President of the Maldives, Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, told Prime Minister John Howard during the ASEAN tsunami summit in Jakarta last week repairing the coral reefs was one of his country's main priorities. Mr Howard today announced the formation of the CSIRO-led team. "Australia's expertise in the management of coral reefs and fisheries will be used to help this tiny Indian Ocean nation repair its marine resources which are fundamental to the country's economic life," Mr Howard said. The team is likely to include scientists from the Australian Institute of Marine Science, Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, James Cook University and the Reef Co-operative Research Centre. The exact extent of the damage to Maldives' reefs has yet to be determined. But it is known that when a tsunami passes, reef structures grind into each other, causing extensive damage. Another problem is the amount of silt, sand and organic matter churned into the water which can smother plant and marine life. It is likely some parts of the reef could take hundreds of years to grow back, given that reef-forming coral grows only about half a centimetre a year. The health of the reefs could in turn affect the size of fish stocks which rely on them. Mr Howard also today announced a team of 15 teachers would be sent to the Maldives later this month for the start of the school year. Many schools were damaged or destroyed in the tsunami. The prime minister said the Maldives president had told him getting children back to school was also a government priority. The Maldives lost 74 people in the tsunami, according to the latest count, and about 50,000 are in need of aid. Australia sent a medical and relief team in the immediate aftermath of the disaster. |
Posted by:God Save The World |
#1 If they sink all the pirate ships in the area to the proper depth, the free-swimming juvenile coral critters will attach themselves to the hulks, quickly creating new sections of reef. Rubble piles from bits of destroyed roads and buildings would be even better, and more quickly available...although less intrinsically satisfying in the long run, and considerably less aestheically pleasing for the the scuba divers. |
Posted by: trailing wife 2005-01-09 4:22:53 AM |