Home Caribbean News This coral reef should be dead—so why is it thriving?

This coral reef should be dead—so why is it thriving?

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A Honduran coral reef withstood a century of pollution and disease. It could be used to restore dying Caribbean reefs, if scientists can figure out how it survived. Ashley Stimpson (National Geographic) provides details on the research and results of various studies on coral in Tela Bay. [Many thanks to Peter Jordens for bringing this item to our attention.]

By almost every measure, the coral in Tela Bay should be dead. Yet despite decades of pollution, industrial degradation, and heat waves that have decimated other reefs in the region, this reef on the northern Caribbean coast of Honduras is fantastically, flamboyantly alive.

Tela Bay boasts more than 68 percent live coral cover—a staggering figure compared to the rest of Caribbean, which averages only 18 percent. If scientists can figure out what makes Tela’s reefs so hardy, they could use its secrets—or even just its genes—to repopulate the Caribbean’s withering reefs.

Those efforts are already underway. In May, scientists from the University of Miami collected 13 elkhorn coral specimens from the waters of Tela Bay in the world’s first attempt to breed corals from two different countries to increase their tolerance to the deadly ocean heat waves that are becoming more common with climate change. If the gambit pays off, the new coral could be used to restore the state’s rapidly disappearing reefs.

“If elkhorn is going to survive in Florida, it’s going to need outside help,” says Andrew Baker, a University of Miami marine scientist. “That means we’re going to have to introduce diversity, ideally from a resilient population that’s dealing with the same conditions.”

Baker’s team also collected DNA samples in Honduras, hoping to unravel a mystery researchers have been trying to solve since the tiny Central American inlet showed up on their radar in 2010: Why is the coral reef in Tela Bay so darn tough?  

After just weeks in their new Florida tanks, the coral are already starting to give up their secrets.

‘Never seen anything like it’

Tela Bay was one of the first places Antal Borcsok ever donned a scuba mask. In 2010, he and his wife, then the owners of a nearby hotel and newly certified divers, decided to while away an afternoon in the tiny inlet. “There was so much coral—so many varieties, colors, species, growth patterns. It was just beautiful,” says Borcsok, who is now the executive director of Tela Marine, a nonprofit science education program. “But we were new divers, and we thought it must be very normal because no one makes a big deal out of it.”

Still, Borcsok had a hunch they had stumbled upon something special. Soon, he invited friends, more experienced divers from Roatan—the country’s scuba diving mecca—to check it out. “As soon as we got in the water, they forgot all about us and they started taking pictures,” Borcsok remembers. “They had never seen anything like it.”

Almost no one had ever seen anything like it, in fact.

“Everyone would have assumed that these mainland reefs would be kind of crappy,” says Baker. “There’s a lot of freshwater runoff, a lot of murky water, and huge fluctuations in salinity.”

In addition to experiencing heat events that would bleach other coral, the species in Tela have been exposed to decades of industrial pollution from the endless shipments of bananas that were once loaded just feet above this delicate ecosystem. They’ve also been subjected to agricultural runoff and spillover from a local wastewater lagoon that serves Tela’s 100,000 residents.

And yet, the coral here thrives. Antlers of critically endangered Elkhorn coral grow in knobby bunches; large fists of brain coral stud the seafloor. How did this happen? “That’s what everyone is trying to find out,” says Borcsok, who, along with his wife, has become “the reef’s evangelist.” Together, they have helped make Tela Bay a marine protected area and established the only public aquarium in Central America, inviting Hondurans to discover the dazzling marine life most didn’t realize flourishes so close to their shores. 

They also put out a call to scientists like Baker to study the coral—and perhaps discover a way to save reefs around the world facing destruction from climate change. “The Bay is resilient, but everything is resilient only to a certain point; eventually, it will get overwhelmed,” Borcsok says. “So we may not have much time to figure this out.” [. . .]

The future of Tela Bay

There is more good news out of Miami—four of the 13 Honduran elkhorn that the scientists collected have already spawned and been successfully crossed with Florida elkhorn. “We have several thousand larvae that are in the process of settling into baby coral,” says Baker. “I feel like a new father!”

Still, the scientist is realistic about the work ahead. “It’s really just the beginning if the reefs in the Caribbean are going to survive,” he says. But Baker hopes this type of genetic exchange between countries will become de rigueur. “Climate change ignores borders,” he says, and so should researchers. [. . .]

For full article, see https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/article/tela-bay-coral-reef-mystery

[Photo above by Antal Borcsok: Despite being exposed to decades of industrial pollution on the northern coast of Honduras, Tela Bay is abundantly alive with coral—including these spectacular great star coral (Montastraea cavernosa). What has made it so resilient?] 

A Honduran coral reef withstood a century of pollution and disease. It could be used to restore dying Caribbean reefs, if scientists can figure out how it survived. Ashley Stimpson (National Geographic) provides details on the research and results of various studies on coral in Tela Bay. [Many thanks to Peter Jordens for bringing this