Genady Posted January 6, 2022 Posted January 6, 2022 Twenty seven years ago, our Marine Park started a long-term "experiment" in coral development, albeit inadvertently. They installed concrete mooring blocks, 1m x 1m x 1m, along the town shoreline for yachts and boats to moor. Coral colonies began inhabiting the block faces. Years later, I’ve noticed that this intriguing growth is not randomly uniform but instead follows patterns, some quite puzzling. Here is one of them. There are two lines of the moorings between South and North ends of the downtown boulevard. One line consists of a dozen moorings constructed from three blocks each and is located about 50m from shore, just near the reef drop-off. Another line consists of a dozen moorings constructed from two blocks each and is located on the sand-flat, half way between the reef drop-off and the shore. I've compared exposed vertical faces of the blocks near the drop-off and those of the blocks near the shore. Where would one expect to find more corals? Wouldn’t corals prefer to grow near the reef and away from the town shoreline with all its polluted water and sewage runoff? The corals provided surprises. More coral colonies grew on the faces of the blocks close to the shore than on those close to the reef. Only 12% of the faces of the off-shore blocks are covered with live corals, like here: Twice as much, 25%, of the close-to-shore block faces are covered with live corals, like here: What is going on? Are shore effects good for the corals? Are some off-shore effects bad for them? What factors are responsible? Any ideas? Questions? More info?
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