Shrimp

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

New US sanctuary improves understanding of important habitats

Minimal economic effects seen from closing lightly used area to fishing and diving.
  Photo: NOAA
Monitoring activities at Gray's Reef National Marine.
The southern third of NOAA’s 22-square mile Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary off the Georgia coast was designated a research area, where scientists can study how human activities and natural processes affect the sanctuary’s marine resources.

This new research area is specifically designed for conducting controlled scientific studies where human activities cannot affect the results. Fishing and diving will be prohibited in the lightly used, 8-square mile research area, which currently hosts no commercial fishing. Vessels will be permitted to travel through it without stopping.

Scientists will be able to design and implement habitat studies where critical variables can be controlled over long periods of time. The research area will provide managers with the high-caliber science needed to improve understanding of the effects of human activities on the sanctuary’s natural resources. The designated research area is relatively free of human activity, and therefore, it can be studied and compared to the rest of the sanctuary.

The research area will help scientists study how natural events such as hurricanes and droughts affect the sanctuary, and serve as a place to monitor and study the effects of climate change and ocean acidification.

“Having an area where scientists can compare natural processes with human-induced change in the sanctuary will help us better understand how humans affect live-bottom habitats like Gray’s Reef,” said George Sedberry, sanctuary superintendent.

Advertisement