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Pesticides compound climate risk to Reef
February 5, 2007
Corals already under pressure from global climate change are facing
an additional threat in the form of pesticides running off from the
land, a new scientific study in the journal Marine Ecology Progress
Series shows.
Corals can be harmed by agricultural chemicals at levels so low as
to be practically undetectable, a ground-breaking study by scientists
at the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS), the ARC Centre
of Excellence for Reef Studies (ARC CoE) and James Cook University
(JCU) concludes.
Reefs on a global scale are under threat from many sources; one of
the most insidious is land based pollutants from agriculture – and the
new research indicates that this threat may have been underestimated.
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The study measured the sensitivity of
the eggs, larvae and adults of the broadcast spawning coral,
Acropora millepora, to a number of common pollutants including
four classes of agricultural insecticides and a fungicide commonly
used in Great Barrier Reef river catchments. According to AIMS
scientist, Dr Andrew Negri the novelty of the study is that it
explored the effects of insecticides on many different life stages
of the coral.
"Previous studies have focused only on the adults, which seem
more robust to insecticides. Our study looked at fertilization,
larval development, survival and metamorphosis and we found that
some of these stages were very vulnerable to these chemicals at
very low concentrations".
Kathryn Markey, of JCU, continues "Neither fertilization rates
nor adult branches were affected by any of the insecticides. In
contrast, coral settlement was reduced by between 50 and 100%
following 18 hours exposure to very low concentrations of each
insecticide".
Dr Andrew Baird of the ARC CoE for Reef Studies says "These
developmental stages and events are critical points in the life
history of corals. The failure of any one of these events could
seriously reduce the ability of coral populations to replenish
themselves".
In addition, the study found that coral at all life stages was
particularly sensitive to the agricultural fungicide MEMC, which
caused bleaching in adult corals at levels so low as to be
scarcely measurable.
These are some of the most sensitive
biological responses to pesticide contamination in the marine
environment yet demonstrated. The researchers say the real worry
is that the effects of these chemicals
were found at such low levels.
In addition, the high sensitivity of coral settlement also
suggests current water quality guidelines may not adequately
protect all coral life stages.
The team says the pesticide threat has
been recognised by both state and federal governments in Australia
where up to 80 per cent of the catchment of the Great Barrier Reef
contains some form of agriculture. |

Normally developing
coral embryos at the “prawn chip” stage, 12 hours after
fertilisation.
Image: Andrew Negri

Coral
embryos exposed to 1 µg/L of the fungicide MEMC. The embryos
have not developed normally and will not make it to the larval
stage.
Image: Andrew Negri

Up
close image of a coral branch exposed to 1 µg/L of the fungicide
MEMC. The brown tissue is normal but the MEMC has caused tissue
death, exposing the white skeleton underneath.
Image: Andrew Negri
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The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, with other government
agencies, is currently overseeing the implementation of the "Reef
Water Quality Protection Plan", a ten-year $40 million program to halt
and reverse the declining quality of water entering the GBR Marine
Park by improving land management practices.
However such measures do not necessarily apply elsewhere in the
world.
Dr Negri says that the latest IPCC climate change report provides a
particular context and reasons for concern about the impact of
pesticides on corals: "Corals are already under pressure from rising
sea temperatures and pesticides in runoff may be causing additional
critical stresses on corals especially during the early life histories
like coral larvae," he says.
Further information
Markey KL, Baird AH, Humphrey C, Negri A (2007) Insecticides and
a fungicide affect multiple coral life stages. Mar Ecol Prog Ser
330: 127-137.
Available Open access at
http://www.int-res.com/articles/meps_oa/m330p127.pdf
Media contacts:
Dr Andrew Negri, AIMS
Telephone: 07 4753 4322
Email: a.negri@aims.gov.au
Ms Kathryn Markey, JCU
Mobile: 0422 292 078
Email:
kathryn.markey@jcu.edu.au
Dr Andrew Baird, ARCoECRS
Telephone: 07 4781 4857
Email: andrew.baird@jcu.edu.au
Jenny Lappin, CoECRS,
Telephone: +61 07 4781 4222
Jim O’Brien, James Cook University Media Office
Telephone: 07 4781 4822
Wendy Ellery,
AIMS Media Liaison
Telephone: 07 4753 4409
Mobile: 0418 729 265
Email:
w.ellery@aims.gov.au
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