Pictured is an aerial view of the Amazon river, Amazonas state, Brazil on Dec. 12, 2013.
Photo: Reuters
Scientists have discovered a massive coral reef at the mouth of the
Amazon River in northern Brazil in some of the muddiest waters in the
world where coral is not known to thrive.
The reef is already in danger, the Guardian reported Friday. The Brazilian government has reportedly sold 80 blocks for oil exploration and drilling at the mouth of the Amazon, some on top of the reef.
The reef is already in danger, the Guardian reported Friday. The Brazilian government has reportedly sold 80 blocks for oil exploration and drilling at the mouth of the Amazon, some on top of the reef.
“These [exploration] blocks will soon be producing oil in
close proximity to the reefs ... Such large-scale industrial activities
present a major environmental challenge,” researchers wrote in a study
detailing the discovery.
Coral are tiny, soft-bodied
animals that work together to form protective reefs from calcium,
usually in ocean water. The reefs attract other marine life, supporting
biodiversity.
The 3,600-square-mile coral reef system found in the Amazon
River ranges from 100 to 400 feet deep. More than 60 species of sponges,
73 species of fish, spiny lobsters, stars and other reef life exist in
the vibrant ecosystem stretching from French Guiana to Brazil’s
Maranhão state.
The discovery is unusual because corals are usually known to
be found only in clear, sunlit saltwater. The coral reef could inform
scientists about how the increasingly fragile ecosystems threatened by
rising ocean temperatures and acidity levels might survive
under other conditions.
“I was flabbergasted, as were the rest of the 30
oceanographers,” co-author Patricia Yager, a professor of oceanography
and climate change at the University of Georgia, told the Atlantic about
the find.
Rebecca Albright, an oceanographer and coral researcher at
the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, D.C., who did not
work on the Amazon River paper, confirmed that reefs had not previously
been found in the area.
“Traditionally, our understanding of reefs has focused on
tropical shallow coral reefs which harbor biodiversity that rivals
tropical rainforests,” she said in an email to the Atlantic.
“More recently, we’re starting to explore and appreciate different
types of reefs that exist in marginal environments. The new Amazonian
reef system described in this paper is another example of a marginal
reef that we didn't previously know existed.”
The reef is the size of Delaware and could include many new species.
“This is something totally new and different from what is present in any other part of the globe,” said Fabiano
Thompson, an oceanographer at the Universidade Federal do Rio de
Janeiro. “But until now, it’s been almost completely overlooked.”
Human pollution has contributed to a major decline in coral
reefs across the world in recent years, according to
a collection of studies published Friday by a team of global researchers.
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