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MandarinFish

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I feel very strongly that it is up to the hobby to help locate, identify, preserve, and captive propagate reef animals. Yes, reefkeepers make mistakes.

The hobby CAN help the wild reefs. I urge you to please reconsider purchasing large angels (and other target species) from Indo-PI that are frequently cyanide caught. Consider a hybrid option on your next car, or biodiesel (even better). And of course, share corals. ;) This is today's news-
from http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051025/ap_on_sc/coral_reef_destruction&printer=1

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Half of Coral Reefs Could Be Destroyed (Tue Oct 25,10:10 AM ET)

Nearly half of the world's coral reefs may be lost in the next 40 years unless urgent measures are taken to protect them against the threat of climate change, according to a new report released Tuesday by the World Conservation Union.

The Swiss-based organization called for the establishment of additional marine protected areas to prevent further degradation by making corals more robust and helping them resist bleaching.

"Twenty percent of the earth's coral reefs, arguably the richest of all marine ecosystems, have been effectively destroyed today," said Carl Gustaf Lundin, head of the agency's marine environment program who helped write the report "Coral Reef Resilience and Resistance to Bleaching."

"Another 30 percent will become seriously depleted if no action is taken within the next 20-40 years, with climate change being a major factor for their loss," he said in a statement.

Coral bleaching is caused by increased surface temperatures in the high seas and higher levels of sunlight caused by climate change. As temperatures rise, the algae on which corals depend for food and color die out, causing the coral to whiten, or "bleach."

Prolonged bleaching conditions over ten weeks can eventually lead to the death of the coral.

"Current predictions are that massive coral bleaching will become a regular event over the next 50 years," Lundin said.

In its report, the organization said that marine parks reduce the stress on coral reef ecosystems by reducing the impact of pollution and overfishing.

The report also recommends a strategy for the establishment of a global marine park network in the face of climate change, covering all important marine ecosystems including coral reefs.

Other key strategies to enable coral reefs to be more resilient to bleaching are sustainable fisheries management and integrated coastal management, the report found.

"Destructive fishing practices such as blast or poison fishing can make coral reef more vulnerable to bleaching," said The Nature Conservancy's Rod Salm in a statement. "It can decrease coral cover or deplete fish populations that are important for the coral reef ecosystem."
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On the Net: The World Conservation Union: http://www.iucn.org/
 
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Anonymous

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out of curiosity how old are most of the "coral reefs" (the important ones).. 10s of thousands of years old? millions?
 

GSchiemer

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How do you protect natural reefs "against the threat of climate change," which is arguably out of our control. Perhaps we can install giant chillers in areas of natural reefs. :)
 

MandarinFish

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Climate change is not out of our control, my friend. We are the ones changing the climate.

Global warming is caused greatly by fossil fuel consumption.

When we want to help the reef? We can trade in a Hummer for a Prius. Or any similar type of effort. As we know, America is the largest resource consuming nation. As Americans, it is incumbent upon us to lead the world in efficiency, especially RE: devastating fossil fuel use.

That has not been the case and has to change.

Global warming is a serious, real, and man-made threat.

Also, we can, as hobbyists, make important decisions like:
* not buying cyanide caught species
* not buying species with high mortality (few have any idea how many Powder Blue Tangs die just to get one in a store tank for sale)... species that fare poorly in shipping and captivity have their populations decimated by us hobbyists

We, as hobbyists, have to caretake the wild reefs we obviously love. Without them, there is little to no hobby. Powder Blues, cleaner wrasses, goldflake angels, etc all have very important ecological niches to fill in thier biomes and don't belong in the trade.

Reefkeepers make environmental-impact decisions all day, every day. It's up to us to care and choose tank-bred or grown over big wild colonies, animals that survive VS those that don't, efficient transportation VS gas-guzzling living rooms on wheels, etc. We can help. :)

We help when we grow out and share corals, share knowledge, share our passion for these ecosystems (we all inform houseguests, I'm sure, of what animals we're keeping, etc). We can do good things. Supposedly neon-green nepthea is endangered or extinct in the wild, but my local club has tons of it we share with everyone in regular meetings. :)

I personally don't think this is a Sump topic. It closely, strongly relates to reefkeeping. If we don't care for wild reefs, especially as American consumers (we take so much more than other people), who will?

"We can be heroes, just for one day" - Bowie
 

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