Pipe Ghostfish

User login

Powered by Drupal, an open source content management system

Upcoming Dive shows

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
6 Jul 2012 - 8 Jul 2012
Johannesburg, South Africa
7 Sep 2012 - 9 Sep 2012
Edmonton, Canada
19 Oct 2012 - 21 Oct 2012
Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
14 Nov 2012 - 17 Nov 2012
Hong Kong
15 Dec 2012 - 17 Dec 2012

Care to comment? See our FaceBook page

Frozen corals could help to preserve species

The Great Barrier Reef’s future may depend on subzero temperatures.
Frozen corals could help to preserve species
Credit:   Toby Hudson / Wikimedia Commons
Corals on Flynn Reef, part of the Great Barrier Reef near Cairns, Queensland, Australia.
Scientists hope that by using frozen cells and sperm from corals this could help in conservation the coral reefs in the future.

Researchers from the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology and other partnering organizations spent two weeks at the end of November collecting sperm and embryonic cells during spawning from two species of coral and have built the first frozen repository for the Great Barrier Reef that could someday restore a coral species or diversify a population.

“It turns out we can produce significant numbers of developing larvae using the thawed sperm and that those larvae actually settle,” said Mary Hagedorn, a marine biologist at SCBI. Coral settling is the process in which a free-swimming, bowling pin-shaped coral larva metamorphoses into a single polyp baby coral. “This is a huge milestone for us because if the larvae couldn’t metamorphose and settle, we wouldn’t be able to successfully use the bank for conservation efforts, which is the driving force behind this important research.”

The new frozen bank includes two reef-building species of coral, Acropora tenuis and A. millepora, both of which now reside in long-term storage at the Taronga Western Plains Zoo in Dubbo, Australia. Hagedorn has already successfully applied this technology to reefs in the Caribbean and Hawaii. Though they remain alive, the banked cells are in a stasis and researchers can thaw the frozen material in one, 50 or, in theory, even 1,000 years from now.

Done properly over time, researchers can rear samples of frozen material and, if necessary, place them back into ecosystems to infuse new genes into natural populations, helping to enhance the health and viability of wild stocks. The work is the result of a partnership between SCBI, Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology, Taronga Conservation Society Australia, Australian Institute of Marine Science and Monash University.

Source: The Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute

Advertisement