Emily Hower, research assistant at Nova Southeastern University, works in the field on coral off Key West, Florida. She comes out of the water and removes her diving mask. The news is not good.
Most of the pillar corals that his team has been watching for years are dead.
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"It's a huge disaster happening under the waves," says Karen Neely, Coral Ecologist at Nova. "It's about the fire in the Amazon. It is at the level of a disease that annihilates all American forests.
The disease associated with the loss of stony coral tissue attacks coral tissue, transforming healthy and vibrant marine ecosystems into a dull and dead world in a matter of weeks.
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The disease has ravaged the entire Atlantic reef off Florida, in parts of the Caribbean, and has recently been reported near Belize in Central America. The pillar coral, whose clusters of spiky fingers seem to be rising from the bottom of the sea, is "reproductive extinct" off the coast of Florida, says Keri O'Neill, chief scientist on the coast of Florida. aquarium at the Florida Aquarium.
At the aquarium, a room where lights are off most of the year brings a rare ray of hope. Here, a complex and expensive system of LED lighting is designed to emulate sunrises, sunsets and moon phases to convince reservoir corals to reproduce as if they were in the ocean.
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Such a loss would represent "a loss of biodiversity that could be a source of future drugs, loss of fisheries, loss of tourism value," Brandt said. "Many Caribbean islands have some of their coral reef-based culture and if you lose those reefs, you lose an aspect of their culture."
Photo montage by Gabrielle Fonseca Johnson; Edited by Rosalba O & # 39; Brien; Layout by Angie Dixon