Webinar of the Week: Reef Restoration through Coral Gardening in the Caribbean

This week’s webinar is from Rosenstiel School student Christina Vilmar. Christina presented “Reef Restoration through Coral Gardening in the Caribbean,” in Dr. Neil Hammerschlag’s Conservation Biology class.

Recently, coral gardening has been gaining attention as an effective tool for reef restoration to enhance natural coral recovery and rehabilitate degraded reefs. Coral gardening is the process of collecting coral biomass (generally by breaking off fragments), growing fragments in a nursery, and outplanting the reared corals on reefs. One study showed 1.4-1.8 times more coral produced from coral gardening than undisturbed control colonies and demonstrated that collection of fragments did not significantly damage the donor.

Watch Christina’s presentation on Acropora, a Caribbean coral that serves as a major reef builder providing essential habitats. Since the 1980′s, Acropora has experienced a 80-90% decline.

- Andrew DeChellis
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The Past is the Key to the Present

“The past is the key to the present” is a mantra that all geologists are familiar with, and it’s why we do what we do! In the paleoclimatology lab at RSMAS (aka “Club Mud”), researchers use marine sediments to reconstruct past climate changes. Understanding the natural rhythms, cycles, and perturbations of the climate cycle in the past can help us to better predict climate change in the future, and the potential added impact of human activities on future climate change.

Club Mud students have used the geochemistry of fossils and sediments in cores from the Tropical Atlantic (southern Caribbean) and Tropical Pacific (Gulf of Papua) to reconstruct changes in tropical sea surface temperature, sea level, and precipitation patterns for periods spanning hundreds of thousands of years. The tropics are a large source of heat and water vapor to the atmosphere, and so an important part of the global climate system to study. Of particular interest is the migration of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), a band of precipitation where the Northern hemisphere and Southern hemisphere trade winds converge. The ITCZ moves north and south across the equator on an annual basis, resulting in wet and dry seasons in the tropics. Longer-term shifts associated with cooling and warming climate trends can result in prolonged drought or flooding conditions that can affect human populations in equatorial countries.

Dr. Larry Peterson with the Avaatech XRF Core Scanner

One invaluable instrument that Club Mud researchers use to help understand changes in ITCZ position is an X-Ray Fluorescence Scanner, which was the second of its kind in the US. The XRF scanner obtains information about the chemical composition of sediment cores far more rapidly than conventional analysis would allow, and at up to sub-annual resolution. This instrument lets us study long archives that may have previously been too expensive or time-consuming to investigate. We can then use the data we get to investigate ITCZ migration over long time periods and a wide variety of climatic conditions, but at timescales that are relevant to human society. The more we know about the past, the better we can hope to predict the future.

-Kelly Gibson
Marine Geology & Geophysics student
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Tiger shark vomits feathers, as well as new ecological information

One of the coolest aspects of doing research on the water is the “wild” aspect of it all—anything could happen on a given day, and there is always the potential for new discoveries. Sometimes discoveries are made after years of data analysis and attention to an issue, while other times nature hands it over to you in the heat of the moment….literally.

What would you do if a tiger shark vomited partially digested food on you?

Our research team was faced with this very question in November 2010 during a normal day of shark research in the Florida Keys. While taking measurements and blood samples on a sub-adult female tiger shark, I noticed a trickling of greenish, oily liquid coming from the mouth of the tiger shark. A few seconds later, a huge clump of feathers joined the river of bile and stomach acid. I sat there next to the shark, and couldn’t help but smile, knowing what this neat little observation meant.

These are the moments that we savor as scientists—the ones when nature decides to give you a little hint, a “tip” so to speak. We finished the work up of the animal, attached a satellite tag to her, and sent her on her way. Meanwhile, we bagged up the feathers and kept them on ice. And while tiger sharks are known to have a broad diet which indeed includes birds, we knew an identification of the specimen was needed before we could make any conclusions.

Partially digested remains of an American Coot, as vomited by a female tiger shark.

I spent the entire next morning calling bird experts at NOAA, Miami Museum of Science and the Florida Keys Bird Sanctuary. Upon making a few calls and emails, the story got juicier and juicier. I soon found out that there was a recent massive bird die-off, where hundreds of turkey vultures somehow ended up floating dead in Biscayne Bay and the middle Florida Keys—an area right in the “wheelhouse” of our tiger sharks. With the help of Tom Jackson at NOAA, we positively identified the specimen as an American Coot, a terrestrial bird species which is found in marshes throughout the middle of North America. It wasn’t a marine bird, and hardly a local species.

How did it end up in the tiger shark’s stomach?

The tiger shark’s menu is large and diverse. Photo by Austin Gallagher

We concluded that since there was a massive input of new potential prey items, the tiger sharks responded and took advantage. In fact, results from our satellite tagged individual showed that it spent a considerable time on the surface near Biscayne Bay after we released it, potentially continuing to feed on the floating mass of birds.

While tiger sharks are known to consume birds, such a scavenging event has rarely been described in the Atlantic, allowing us to publish a short note in the journal Florida Scientist. Since that day, we have seen tiger sharks puke up some other interesting food items. And while this was just one small observation, our finding is another piece of the puzzle to understanding these complex predators. Nature sometimes moves in mysterious way, and the infamous “Tiger Bird” episode proves just that.

If any other sharks want to puke on us, we are ready and willing.

-Austin Gallagher
PhD Student, Research Assistant
RJ Dunlap Marine Conservation Program
Abess Center for Ecosystem Science and Policy
www.rjd.miami.edu
www.austingallagher.com
agallagher@rsmas.miami.edu

Webinar of the Week: Long-Spined Sea Urchin – a Keystone Species for Caribbean Reef Health

This week’s webinar is from Rosenstiel School student Christine Beggs. Christine delivers her presentation, “Determination of the Long-Spined Sea Urchin, Diadema antillarium, as a Keystone Species by its Role Controlling Caribbean Reefs,” in Dr. Neil Hammerschlag’s ‘Conservation Biology’ class.

A keystone species is typically defined as one that has a critical role in maintaining the structure of an ecological community and because of their importance, some suggest that concentrated species conservation efforts may help facilitate re-habilitation of degraded ecosystems. To assess the methods for successful determination of a keystone species, a comprehensive literature review was conducted of Diadema antillarium’s role in controlling Caribbean reefs community structure.

Aside from being a RSMAS student, Christine is the Founder of Project Blue Hope, an educational blog that has become a philanthropic venture to effect lasting ocean protection with the support of local coastal stakeholders.

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MPS Announces New ‘Coastal Sustainability’ Track

The Rosenstiel School for Marine and Atmospheric Science is enhancing the Master of Professional Science program once again by creating a new track in Coastal Sustainability Science and Practice (Marine Affairs and Policy Division). This track will be offered for the first time in Fall 2012 and provides students with advanced training in the expanding field of sustainability, with a combined focus on the practical aspects of systems management and the theoretical understanding of whole-systems design. The goal of this track is to train future leaders who create solutions for sustainability issues at local and global levels.

The wet lab at Cape Eleuthera Institute

The Fall semester will provide students with the unique experience to conduct a semester of hands-on applied research on location at the Cape Eleuthera Institute in Eleuthera, Bahamas. The Cape Eleuthera Institute specializes in testing innovative sustainable technologies and practices for small island and coastal systems. MPS students will develop professional skills through their direct involvement in ongoing aquaculture, biodigestion, passive building design, sustainable entrepreneurship, marine management, and alternative energy programs. They will become active participants in everything from conceptual design to the daily technical maintenance of these projects. In addition, students benefit greatly from the exposure to island conditions and daily life at an active field research campus on a small island with a population of only 10,000.

Cape Eleuthera Institute

The Cape Eleuthera Institute semester will be strengthened and complimented by a Spring semester of coursework at the Rosenstiel School for Marine and Atmospheric Science. This curriculum will provide a foundation in the history and philosophy of sustainability, as well as exposure to case studies of sustainable design from other bioregions. Additionally, students will be allowed to select electives that reflect their growing interests, such as aquaculture, the economics of natural resources, and environmental engineering. This will be followed by a summer internship that expands upon their previous experience, either returning to CEI or working with another faculty approved internship site. This degree provides excellent preparation for employment in the areas of marine conservation, renewable energy, ecological design, and coastal systems management.

- Dr. Brian Soden
Professor and Associate Dean for Professional Studies
- Dr. Jill Richardson
Director – Masters of professional Science/Lecturer/Advisor

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Kristen Bell talks sharks with David Letterman

Friday night, actress Kristen Bell was a guest on the Late Show with David Letterman to promote her new show “House of Lies” airing on Showtime. During the interview, Kristen talked about a recent shark diving experience in South Africa, and even brought up her shark tagging experience with the Rosenstiel School’s very own R.J. Dunlap Marine Conservation Program this past year at Summit Series.

The shark bit begins around the 21:20 mark here.

Snap shot of Kristen Bell on the Late Show with David Letterman on 1/6/12 talking sharks.

-Andrew DeChellis
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