(Sun Network)

Marine life could take centuries to recover from
killer waves   

 Hong Kong - Beaches around South Asia devastated by
tsunamis could be restored to their former glory
within a few years, but the marine life through which
the huge waves passed could take centuries to recover,
experts say. 
Coral reefs, mangroves, fish and other marine life had
been damaged by the tsunamis which rose out of the
Indian Ocean on Sunday, triggered by a massive
earthquake near the Indonesian island of Sumatra.

The disaster has left more than 119,000 people dead
and up to five million displaced in the region, with
Indonesia, Thailand, India and Sri Lanka the worst
affected countries.

"It is so hard to say in brief, but the level of
devastation of coastal areas by the disaster is
obvious," director of Conservation International in
the Indonesian resort island of Bali, Ketut Sarjana
Putra, said. 

"It will take a long time to recover." 

The ocean's seagrass bed and mangrove ecosystem would
also be affected, Putra said, but it is the reefs that
bore the brunt of the destruction. 

"The coral reef system might be totally destroyed. It
will take hundreds of years to grow back," he said. 

The health of the reefs could in turn dramatically
affect the size of fish populations which rely on them
for their habitat. 

Lyle Vail, director of the Lizard Island Research
Station on Australia's Great Barrier Reef, said damage
to coral reefs from a tsunami would likely be similar
to that from a cyclone.

When a tsunami passes, reef structures grind into each
other causing extensive damage. In serious cases
recovery would be slow as there would be fewer larval
animals to repopulate the coral.

A major problem would be a loss of fish, displaced by
the waves from their habitat, and other forms of
protein which depend on the reefs. 

Regional marine programme co-ordinator for South and
Southeast Asia with the IUCN (World Conservation
Union) in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Jerker Tamelander, said
damage to the marine ecosystem could be "very, very
serious."

"You have a region where the marine ecosystem is
stressed and degraded as it is," he told.

Tamelander said many coral reefs in the Indian Ocean
were just beginning to recover from damage caused by
the changing water temperatures generated by the El
Nino weather pattern.

"In the region as a whole I think we can expect very
severe ecosystem effects," he said, adding the
recovery process for coral reefs could take "decades
to centuries".

A major problem would be the amount of silt, sand and
organic matter churned into the water which would then
"smother" vegetation and marine life. Coral could also
have been damaged by exposure to the air as water was
sucked back from the shore before the tsunamis hit. 

Tamelander says in some cases mangroves, which protect
the shore from erosion and often serve as nurseries
for young fish, would also have been completely
uprooted and destroyed.

"There will be ramifications over the coming years,"
such as shoreline change, he says.

Michael Keough, professor of marine ecology at the
University of Melbourne, said while relatively little
research has been done on the impact of tsunamis on
reefs, clearly the damage was potentially very
serious. 

Thailand, India, Sri Lanka, Indonesia and the Maldives
all have extensive reef systems in the affected areas,
he said. 

"It is difficult to tell just how far offshore the
damage extends," he said.

A tsunami passes more quickly than a cyclone but it
may have more power which would intensify as it
entered shallower water, where the coral reefs grow.
Apart from the reefs, many of the affected areas also
have fish farming operations near the shore which
would have been inundated.

It was difficult to predict how long recovery would
take, Keough said. 

"In cases of severe damage there are cases where you
do not see much recovery after 30 years," he said. 
 
 







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