Basement coral farms may save reefs

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CNN
http://www.cnn.com/2006/TECH/science/07/19...s.ap/index.html

Basement coral farms may save reefs

Wednesday, July 19, 2006; Posted: 2:28 p.m. EDT (18:28 GMT)

Home reef aquariums have been gaining popularity in the United States since the late 1980s.

DRYDEN, New York (AP) -- In upstate New York, famous for its snowy winters and far from any tropical ocean, Steve Lowes is growing coral reefs in his basement.

The 41-year-old English-born Lowes is raising dozens of coral species for his Web-based coral business, Reef Encounters, and is one of a growing breed of coral farmer who have found a niche supporting the booming hobby of keeping aquariums, which in 2005 was a$6.9 billion market.

And in the process, they are also helping scientists learn more about coral and are raising public awareness about a threatened species.

"It brings the ecosystem to life for people in a very effective way that's much more persuasive than reading about it in a book or looking at photographs," Lowes said.

Scientists have identified about 2,000 species of reef-building coral. The coral reefs are typically found in the warm salt waters in region between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn and cover about 1 percent of the earth's surface.

The reefs, some millions of years old, are among the planet's most diverse and productive ecosystems. They are formed by the skeletons of coral and algae.

Their value to the world economy is projected at more than $300 billion as a food source, for tourism appeal and in reducing shoreline erosion. However, they are threatened because of disease, natural disasters, pollution, overharvesting and global warming.

"There's something about life under the sea that attracts the human spirit. It starts with children," said Lowes, a scuba diver whose fascination with the sea began as a child watching Jacques Cousteau documentaries in the 1970s.

Lowes, a chemist for a pharmaceutical company, began growing coral as a hobby more than a decade ago while living in Britain. In 2002, he turned his "addiction" into a business and became a professional coral farmer.

Lowes raises 50 species and sells about 200 animals a month to upstate New York hobbyists and wholesalers. Depending on the species' rarity, they sell from $10 to $1,000 or more. He also helps install high-end reef aquarium systems, some of which can cost in excess of $30,000.

Home reef aquariums have been gaining popularity in the United States since the late 1980s, said Joe Yaillo, curator at Atlantis Marine World in Riverhead, New York, which features a 20,000-gallon tank with the nation's largest live coral reef exhibit.

Lowes' basement looks like a mad scientist's laboratory, with tens of thousands of dollars worth of lighting and filtration equipment hooked up to a 125-gallon aquarium and three large 100-gallon tanks.

He propagates his coral by breaking off millimeter-sized fragments and growing them in the tanks. They grow to about two inches in six months, when they are ready for sale and shipment. While its primary purpose is display, the aquarium also allows Lowes to study the interaction among the more than 60 species he keeps.

Lowes is investigating the ways corals' anti-fungal compounds could be useful to humans, one of many subjects he is working on with a Cornell University professor. Another is a project studying coral photosynthesis as part of an effort to develop improved lighting systems -- it bothers him that he must rely on fossil fuel to light and power his tanks.

By growing coral for home aquariums, hobbyists are reducing the need to harvest wild coral and have contributed significantly to the growing understanding of coral over the past 15 years, said Eric Borneman, a professor of coral reef biology at the University of Houston who has written extensively on coral.

"As scientists, we often only get snapshots of the coral we study, whether in the wild or in the lab," Borneman said. "Hobbyists are filling in the gaps by looking at coral every day, for much longer periods."

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
 
the only problem with the idea of reefers saving the reef's is vast areas of reef are off limits to commercial harvesting.(Florida) and ironically the Caribbean is where a large die off is occurring now.
the groups who fought to get the reefs off limits 15 years ago may have inadvertently doomed some species because they have to stay where they are and might become extinct.
 
That would be nature taking its course wouldn't it?

Unless the extinction was man made say through polution.
 
that's the rub, a lot of experts are saying it is due to abnormally high water temps. from global warming. they also are saying insecticide run off is a contributing factor.
 
I have to agree that it is a stretch to think that coral basement farms can save the reefs - I do NOT believe that to be true. What I do believe is that as hobbyists we have the ability to be responsible caretakers of these animals and promote the understanding of their biology and their needs in nature.

I half expected that the message would get twisted a little but generally I think it's been a positive presentation of our hobby.

Happy Coral Farming.

SteveL (Steve Lowes)
 
Frags are the only way to go. Part of this hobby is the satisfaction of watching them grow. Before you know it you can frag off the original and have a bunch of nice corals.
 
SteveL: ... the newspaper headline is an attention grabber and not meant to be taken too seriously! I.E. "Tornado rips through cemetary, Thousands Dead" :lol2: You can't save a reef in a basement but perhaps a warehouse ;)

but we all know what you mean ;)
 
Ya, the article is speaking more about how scientists are able to look at rare specimens in a controlled environment and learn more about how the corals live. I don't think their main advocation was that we can grow corals at home and restore reefs.
 
Actually, I think it's due to that bottle of Grey Goose that me and my brother poured in the water when we were vacationing down there last year. :D

We could go on and on about "why" it's happening. I look at it simply as "it IS happening and what can everybody do to either slow it down or stop it."
 
Are there not analogies with the Seti@Home project and other similar schemes? Using the distributed processing power of hundreds of thousands pc's to process data?

This forum (and any internet info exchange mech) seems like its using thousands of reef tanks to research a very current book on an everchanging and developing subject with instant feedback.

This combined knoweldge must compress and focus our understanding of the reefs into a wider understanding. I know it has opened my eyes and mind in the past few weeks i have been reading!
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7927805#post7927805 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by RudeBoy
Actually, I think it's due to that bottle of Grey Goose that me and my brother poured in the water when we were vacationing down there last year. :D

naaa you were jest trying to denitrate the ocean. right:D ;)
 
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