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Sail-World.com : Boaters should 'pay more attention' as 100 coral heads damaged
Boaters should 'pay more attention' as 100 coral heads damaged

'Coral ’reduced to gravel’.'    .

It happened in Hawaii, but it could have been anywhere, and environmentalists are hopping mad. A 40ft power boat that ran aground this week in Kaneohe Bay in Hawaii has destroyed 100 coral heads, according to researchers who visited the site.

Coral anywhere in the world takes many many years to grow but only an instant to destroy. 'It really disturbs me because I'm out there every day trying to protect the reefs and when I see the coral damaged to that capacity it does bother me,' Jason Durnin of Hawaii's Nature Conservancy told Hawaii Now.

The boat is not even stuck on a sandbar where people party. It's a few hundred yards away in an area where coral had been thriving.

'Right at the bow section there is a scar that is probably about 8 to 10 feet wide and 20 to 25 feet long maybe longer that has just dug straight through all the coral heads going down almost a foot and a half,' said Durnin. 'Most of them are just turned to rubble. It really looks like someone got a dump truck and dumped a pile of gravel on the reef there.'

Motor boat destroys more than itself -  .. .  

Durnin is the Kaneohe project manager with The Nature Conservancy who has spent the last three and a half years removing invasive species and algae from Kaneohe Bay in order to help the coral grow. So seeing a boat instantly wipe out a chunk of the reef takes the wind out of his sail.

Coral reefs are a vital part of the ecosystem, but can get damaged or killed by invasive species and disease. The section where the boat hit didn't have any invasive species before but now the concern is the invasive algae will come in before the coral can regrow which will take years.

'There's nothing there to help fight back the invasives that come in,' said Durnin.

Between 30 to 70 gallons of diesel fuel in the boat has been removed. Parker Marine has been contracted to salvage the boat. It will meet with the state to minimize damage in the removal and likely get the 40 foot boat off the reef in the next few days. It is taking on water and grinding the reef below.

'It's going to continue to get worse the longer it sits on there. It's going to keep bouncing around, rolling back and forth,' said Durnin.

The environmentalists, masters of understatement, say boaters need to 'pay more attention'. The owner of the boat will have to pay for the salvage process.


by Nancy Knudsen

  

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http://www.sail-world.com/index.cfm?nid=103697

6:23 AM Sun 11 Nov 2012GMT


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