Restoring Coral Reefs Is Possible and Surprisingly Fast

Author: Dr. Joseph Mercola | Published: February 27, 2018

Coral reefs make up less than one-quarter of 1 percent of the Earth’s surface,1 yet supply resources worth an estimated $375 billion annually, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).2 More than 500 million people around the world depend on coral reefs for protection from storms, food, jobs and recreation, and they provide a home to more than 25 percent of fish species and 800 hard coral species.

As for their importance to their surrounding ecosystems, it is immense, and the sheer diversity of species that depend on coral reefs for spawning, breeding and feeding is equally impressive. There are 34 recognized animal phyla, for instance, and 32 of them are found on coral reefs (even rain forests count only nine different phyla among their midst).3

Sometimes referred to as “rain forests of the sea,” it’s estimated that coral reefs may support up to 2 million different species and act as essential nurseries for one-quarter of fish species.

Coral reefs also serve as carbon sinks, helping to absorb carbon dioxide from the environment, and represent an irreplaceable source of protection for coastal cities. Their importance as a food source is also considerable, as healthy coral reefs can provide about 15 tons of fish and other seafood per square kilometer (.38 square mile) per year.4

Unfortunately, corals are in severe decline. According to conservation organization World Wildlife Fund (WWF), two-thirds of coral reefs worldwide are under serious threat and another one-quarter are considered damaged beyond repair.5 There may, however, be hope, even for damaged reefs, as new technology offers a chance for reefs to regrow at a surprisingly fast pace.

Biorock Technology Restores Coral Reefs

In 2000, it was stated at the International Coral Reef Symposium that about 94 percent of Indonesia’s coral reefs were severely damaged. This included Pemuteran Bay, where the once-thriving coral reef was largely barren. Biorock technology proved to be the answer, restoring the reef in just over a decade:

“Pemuteran formerly had the richest reef fisheries in Bali. The large sheltered bay was surrounded by reefs teeming with fish. The natural population increase was greatly augmented by migration of fishermen from Java and Madura, where inshore fisheries had been wiped out by destructive over-exploitation.

Destructive methods, like use of bombs and cyanide followed their use in other islands, and steadily spread until most of the reefs had been destroyed. The offshore bank reefs that had been dense thickets of coral packed with swarms of fishes, were turned into piles of broken rubble, nearly barren of fish.”6

The Karang Lesteri Project, highlighted in the video above, began in June 2000, when the first “coral nursery” was built at the site. Ultimately, 70 Biorock coral reef structures of different sizes and shapes were planted in the area, restoring the area’s diversity and ecosystem. Formerly known as Seament and Seacrete, Biorock was developed by the late professor Wolf Hilbertz and scientist Thomas Goreau, president of the nonprofit organization the Global Coral Reef Alliance (GCRA).

Projects are now being operated in Indonesia, Bali, Jamaica, the Republic of Maldives, Papua New Guinea, Seychelles, Phuket, Thailand and elsewhere. The technology starts with metal structures that are planted into the reef. Transplanted fragments of live coral (that have been damaged by storms, anchors or other mishaps) are attached and the structure is fed low-voltage electricity to accelerate the growth process. GCRA explains:7

“The Biorock® process … is a new method that uses low voltage direct current electricity to grow solid limestone rock structures in the sea and accelerate the growth of corals providing homes for reef fish and protecting the shoreline. The electrical current causes minerals that are naturally dissolved in seawater to precipitate and adhere to a metal structure. The result is a composite of limestone and brucite with mechanical strength similar to concrete.

Derived from seawater, this material is similar to the composition of natural coral reefs and tropical sand beaches … This patented process increases the growth rate of corals well above normal, giving them extra energy that allows them to survive in conditions that would otherwise kill them. At the same time these structures attract huge numbers of fish, and also provide breakwaters that get stronger with age.”

GCRA states that Biorock reefs grow at a rate of 1 to several centimeters of new rock per year, which is about three to five times faster than normal. While artificial reefs, which are sometimes made by sinking ships, planes, cars, concrete or other man-made materials, will sometimes attract fish and sponges that settle on their surface, the Biorock reefs ultimately turn into true, living coral reefs, courtesy of the growth of limestone. According to GCRA:8

“Coral larvae, which are millimeter-sized freely-swimming baby corals, will only settle and grow on clean limestone rock. This is why conventional artificial reefs made of tires or concrete rarely exhibit hard coral growth. But, when these coral larvae find a limestone surface, they attach themselves and start to grow skeletons. Mineral accretion is exactly what they are searching for. As a result, there are very high rates of natural coral settlement on Biorock structures.”

Is Biorock Sustainable, and Does It Withstand Hurricanes?

Funding to take Biorock to the next level is limited, with most projects so far acting as pilot projects to demonstrate how the process works. And some coral reef experts, such as Rod Salm, senior adviser emeritus with the Nature Conservancy, have suggested the process is too cost prohibitive to work on a large scale.9 Others have pointed out that its dependence on electricity could also be problematic environmentally, although some of the structures are powered via solar panels.

Further, GCRA evaluated damage to the structures in the Caribbean after hurricanes Hanna, Ike and Irma and found them to be remarkably unfazed. While even large shipwrecks in South Florida were damaged or moved during hurricane Andrew, for instance, the Biorocks’ open frameworks allowed water to flow through the structures, sparing them the brunt of the damage.

“For growing corals, we make open frameworks, so the corals can benefit from the water flow through the structure, just as they do in coral reef,” GCRA notes. “As a result of their low cross section to waves, they dissipate energy by surface friction as waves pass through them, refracting and diffracting waves rather than reflecting them. Their low drag coefficient means that they survive waves that would move or rip apart a solid object of the same size.”10

In research published in the journal Revista de Biologia Tropical by Goreau and colleagues, it’s noted that artificial reefs are often discouraged in shallow waters because of concerns that they could damage surrounding habitat during storms. However, in the case of the Biorock restorations, “the waves passed straight through with little damage,” and the researchers said the “high coral survival and low structural damage” after hurricanes suggests the process is effective even in areas that may be hit by storms.11

Another study by Goreau, published in the Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, suggests Biorock electric reefs are able to grow back severely eroded beaches in just a few months. The study noted:12

“Biorock reefs stimulate settlement, growth, survival, and resistance to the environmental stress of all forms of marine life, restoring coral reefs, sea grasses, biological sand production, and fisheries habitat. Biorock reefs can grow back eroded beaches and islands faster than the rate of sea level rise, and are the most cost-effective method of shore protection and adaptation to global sea level rise for low lying islands and coasts”

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Conservation-Minded Purchasing: How Clothing Purchases Help Get Conservation on the Ground

What if, before you purchased a hat or sweater, you knew the wool used to make it came from sheep raised on a ranch managed to improve soil health and increase soil carbon?

Author: Chad Douglas | Published: February 26, 2018

For nearly a decade, ranch owner Lani Estill has worked with the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) to improve soil health. By adding carbon-conscious conservation practices to her ranch, the operation now stores more carbon in the soil than it emits through its operations.

As a result, her operation, Bare Ranch, is marketing “climate beneficial” wool to a national clothing manufacturer. Estill and her family raise sheep and cattle on her 40,000-acre ranch, which sits on the border of northern California and northwest Nevada.

With help from her local NRCS offices and supported by Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) contracts, Estill has also improved wildlife habitat on her ranch. She improved sage grouse habitat by removing thousands of acres of invasive juniper and installed hedgerows for pollinators. She and her co-owners also installed fencing and livestock watering facilities and are following a prescribed grazing management plan.

Bryon Hadwick, NRCS District Conservationist in Alturas, California, works closely with Estill and Bare Ranch to implement conservation practices that are good for the land, animals, atmosphere, and their business.  NRCS is a member of the Bare Ranch conservation team, which includes Point Blue partner biologists, the Carbon Cycle Institute and Fibershed (an organization focused on local fiber-sourcing). This past spring, Bare Ranch worked with these partners to develop and adopt a Carbon Farm Plan.

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Impacts of Soil Carbon Sequestration on Life Cycle Greenhouse Gas Emissions in Midwestern USA Beef Finishing Systems

Author: Paige L. Stanley, et. al. | Published: February 24, 2018

Beef cattle have been identified as the largest livestock-sector contributor to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Using life cycle analysis (LCA), several studies have concluded that grass-finished beef systems have greater GHG intensities than feedlot-finished (FL) beef systems. These studies evaluated only one grazing management system – continuous grazing – and assumed steady-state soil carbon (C), to model the grass-finishing environmental impact. However, by managing for more optimal forage growth and recovery, adaptive multi-paddock (AMP) grazing can improve animal and forage productivity, potentially sequestering more soil organic carbon (SOC) than continuous grazing. To examine impacts of AMP grazing and related SOC sequestration on net GHG emissions, a comparative LCA was performed of two different beef finishing systems in the Upper Midwest, USA: AMP grazing and FL. We used on-farm data collected from the Michigan State University Lake City AgBioResearch Center for AMP grazing. Impact scope included GHG emissions from enteric methane, feed production and mineral supplement manufacture, manure, and on-farm energy use and transportation, as well as the potential C sink arising from SOC sequestration.

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Video: Regenerative Agriculture — A Solution to Climate Change

Author: TEDx Talks | Published: December 4, 2014

WATCH MORE VIDEOS FROM TEDX TALKS HERE

El Comercio Justo, garantía de erradicación de la pobreza

Publicado: 23 de febrero 2018

Se promueve el 20 de febrero como Día Mundial de la Justicia Social para “apoyar la labor de la comunidad internacional encaminada a erradicar la pobreza y promover el empleo pleno y el trabajo decente, la igualdad entre los sexos y el acceso al bienestar social”

Naciones Unidas fijó el 20 de febrero como Día Mundial de la Justicia Social para “apoyar la labor de la comunidad internacional encaminada a erradicar la pobreza y promover el empleo pleno y el trabajo decente, la igualdad entre los sexos y el acceso al bienestar social”. Unos objetivos que han quedado establecidos en la Agenda 2030.  Sin embargo, más de 700 millones de personas viven en condiciones de pobreza extrema.

Esa realidad afecta al 38% de los trabajadores en los países en vías de desarrollo, según el último informe de la OIT. El Comercio Justo garantiza un trabajo digno y mejora las condiciones de vida de más de 2 millones de personas. Así lo han constatado representantes de la organización textil y artesana de Bangladesh ‘Corr the Jute Works’ y del ‘Símbolo de Pequeños Productores (SPP)’.

Un claro ejemplo de ello es el de Punnalaxmi Modhu, una mujer bangladesha de 41 años que vive allí, con escasos rescursos, con su marido y sus tres hijos. Tras unirse a la organización de Comercio Justo Corr the Jute Works, donde aprendió a hacer artículos artesanales con yute, su situación ha cambiado. La familia puede contar con unos ingresos estables, han mejorado su vivienda y sus tres hijos están escolarizados. “Esta es una de las más de 4000 mujeres de nuestra organización que han logrado una vida digna gracias a su trabajo en Comercio Justo”, explica Milton Suranjit, miembro de Corr the Jute Works, una iniciativa de Cáritas Bangladesh.

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Medio ambiente: ¿cuál es la razón por la que desaparecen los mayores lagos del planeta?

Publicado: 25 de febrero 2018

Dentro de los grandes peligros para los lagos se encuentran las cuencas de drenaje cerradas, cuyas aguas no tienen salida fluvial hacia el mar o ríos.

El cambio climático y la mala gestión del agua son las principales razones que explican la desaparición de los lagos en el mundo, un proceso que puede causar una crisis humanitaria, opina el escritor estadounidense Kenneth R. Weiss en un artículo en National Geographic. 

Según el autor californiano, los lagos se calientan por el cambio climático “más rápido que los océanos o el aire”. El calentamiento de las formaciones lacustres provoca evaporaciones, lo que, a su vez, resulta en sequías . Además, la subida de las temperaturas de los lagos impulsa el desarrollo de cianobacterias que afectan negativamente al suministro de agua potable a la población.

Weiss sostiene que uno de los grandes desafíos para los lagos son las cuencas de drenaje cerradas, cuyas aguas no tienen salida fluvial hacia el mar o ríos. Esos lagos endorreicos son poco profundos y salados, así como “hipersensibles a la perturbación”. “Un ejemplo desastroso” es el mar de Aral en Asia Central. Los errores en proyectos de irrigación casi han provocado su desaparición completa.

Lo mismo ocurre con el lago Urmia, en Irán, que puede ser víctima de la sobreexplotación, alerta el experto. La cuenca del Urmia tiene numerosos pozos ilegales y proyectos de irrigación que desvían el agua de afluentes por motivos agrícolas, causando enormes daños. El escritor advierte del peligro que presentan para los lagos los desvíos de los cursos de agua.

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Foro Women4Climate presenta en México a sus 20 “heroínas del clima”

Publicado: 25 de febrero 2018

Mujeres con diversas experiencias que van desde la sustentabilidad hasta alternativas al desabasto de agua en la Ciudad desean aportar su capacidad para la mejora del entorno.

La segunda conferencia anual de Women4Climate (Mujeres por el Clima) presentó este domingo en Ciudad de México a sus “próximas heroínas del clima”, 20 mujeres que diseñaron novedosos proyectos para combatir los efectos del cambio climático y que fueron seleccionadas para un programa de tutoría.

Esta iniciativa forma parte del Foro de liderazgo contra el cambio climático de ciudades (C40), presidido por la alcaldesa de París, Anne Hidalgo, y busca contactar a estas 20 mujeres con tutoras de alto nivel, para permitirles obtener la experiencia y conocimientos necesarios para llevar sus proyectos al máximo potencial.

La AFP entrevistó a tres de estas mujeres con proyectos en Ciudad de México, donde arranca el lunes la segunda conferencia mundial de Women4Climate. Las jóvenes hablaron de su preocupación por el medio ambiente, la importancia de sus propuestas y el papel de la mujer ante el cambio climático.

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Fortalecimiento técnico bufalino en la Zona de Reserva Campesina del Valle del río Cimitarra

Por: Lorena Gonzálesz |  Publicado: 11 de febrero 2018

Con la agroecología y la vida en comunidad la Asociación Campesina del Valle del río Cimitarra – Red Agroecológica Nacional (ACVC-RAN) y los habitantes construyen paz desde el territorio.

Ya son más de 15 años del trabajo de producción bufalina comunitaria, en los cuales la Asociación Campesina del Valle del río Cimitarra – Red Agroecológica Nacional (ACVC-RAN) viene apostándole a mejorar la calidad de vida de los pequeños productores de búfalos en la zona de reserva campesina como un proyecto innovador, agroecológico y sostenible que ha servido como modelo alternativo de emprendimiento para la sustitución de cultivos de uso ilícito en esta región del país.

En el año 2014 se fortalece el proyecto en las líneas de transformación de derivados lácteos y cárnicos de búfalo para su comercialización. Para ello, en los últimos tres años se ha realizado un acompañamiento continuo a las familias beneficiadas en el proyecto a través de un intercambio de saberes en los cuales técnicos y campesinos construyen conocimiento desde la experiencia y la formación profesional para mejorar los procesos realizados en toda la cadena de producción bufalina. Estos espacios de formación posibilitan tanto mejorar la calidad de los productos, como el mejoramiento de las fincas de cada uno de ellos.

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Soup-To-Nuts Podcast: Going Beyond ‘Sustainable’ with Regenerative Farming

Author: Elizabeth Crawford | Published: February 9, 2018

Sustainable often pops up in marketing to describe how products are made or packaged, and while consumers increasingly buy these products at a premium, some in the natural products industry fear the concept is becoming greenwashed while others say the term – even in its purest form – doesn’t go far enough.

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Natural Products Expo West Trend Preview: Regenerative Ag

The conversations to have, education sessions to attend and products to see at Natural Products Expo West to get the full view of this macro trend.

Author: Jenna Blumenfeld | Published: February 13, 2018

For first-timers and seasoned Natural Products Expo West attendees alike, developing a show floor game plan is a dizzying experience. Here, we narrow it down by showcasing exciting new products that exemplify the regenerative ag trend identified by New Hope Network’s 2018 Next Forecast report.

It’s important, though, to remember that products don’t drive change. People do. Strategize Expo West by learning more about what’s trending and prioritizing deeper conversations. Instead of asking if a brand is sustainable, ask why. And ask how. Use our suggested questions within each trend to break the ice, make lasting connections within the industry and have your best Natural Products Expo West ever.

What is regenerative agriculture?

Doing no harm is an imperative, but healing the harm that’s already occurred is among the richest opportunities for agriculture and the food industry. This includes building soil health, scrubbing waterways of fertilizers and sequestering carbon through deep-root perennials.

Questions to ask vendors

Ask potential vendors these questions to see if their regenerative practices align with your standards.

  • How do you define regenerative agriculture?
  • How do you ensure that your suppliers follow regenerative practices?
  • How do you communicate your regenerative practices to customers?
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