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HARBOR BRANCH - OFFICIAL PRESS RELEASE
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EXPEDITION TO HELP PROTECT FLORIDA'S UNIQUE OCULINA DEEPWATER REEFS 30 YEARS AFTER THEIR DISCOVERY
PORT CANAVERAL, Fla. -- On Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2005, scientists will begin a six-day expedition to explore
one of Florida's most vital but least familiar marine resources--the spectacular deepwater coral reefs of the
Oculina Bank--some 30 years after their discovery. Among the team's goals is the start of a sustained and
critically needed monitoring program to complement , and evaluate the effectiveness of, stricter regulations
and enforcement activities in the area. The group will also be exploring new portions of the reef revealed by
a recently developed high-resolution seafloor map.
The Oculina reefs, in depths from 250 to 300 feet, were built over the past thousand years or so by the delicate
ivory tree coral Oculina varicosa, and include a series of spectacular pinnacles, mounds, and ridges that can grow
up to100 feet high. Deepwater Oculina reefs are not known to exist anywhere else on the planet besides off Florida.
Fishing for shrimp and scallops has damaged a large portion of the concentrated coral areas of these reefs over
the past three decades. However, the remaining healthy reefs still support dense and diverse populations of more
than 70 fish species and are critical breeding grounds for commercially important populations of gag and scamp
grouper as well as rock shrimp. The reefs' location directly under the Gulf Stream makes them a potentially
important source of fish larvae for the entire southeast U.S. continental shelf.
Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution scientists first discovered the deepwater Oculina reefs with the
Johnson-Sea-Link submersibles in 1975. John Reed, a Harbor Branch coral expert and expedition co-principal
investigator, nominated the Oculina reefs to for protection in 1981. In 1984, NOAA approved the the South
Atlantic Fishery Management Council's (SAFMC) designation of 92 square miles of the Oculina reefs as a coral
Habitat Area of Particular Concern (HAPC) where the use of bottom trawling, longlines, fish traps and anchoring
by fishing vessels was prohibited. In 2000, the Coral HAPC was expanded to 300 square miles and now extends
from Fort Pierce to Cape Canaveral. The original 92 square-mile area, now known as the Oculina Experimental
Closed Area, has further restrictions including prohibition of bottom fishing for snapper and grouper species.
However, surface trolling for species such as dolphin, tuna, and sailfish is still allowed in the Experimental
Closed Area and the larger HAPC since it poses no threat to the reefs.
"The [SAFMC] has led the nation in managing deepwater coral ecosystems by setting up this reserve, it is now up to
scientists to show if it's working," says expedition leader Andy Shepard from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration's Undersea Research Center (NURC) at the University of North Carolina, Wilmington.
The Oculina expedition, funded by NOAA, will run from Oct. 12-18 on board the M/V Liberty Star, a NASA space shuttle
support ship operated by United Space Alliance and normally used to retrieve spent solid rocket boosters. A second related
expedition is planned for May 2006. To explore the reefs, researchers will be using NURC's Phantom SII Remotely Operated
Vehicle (ROV), an undersea robot equipped with video and still cameras and a manipulator arm for gathering samples. Team
members will also be filing daily dispatches from the ship at www.at-sea.org.
One of the expedition's goals is to "ground truth," or verify, a newly produced high-resolution multibeam sonar map
of the region, which offers unprecedented resolution to reveal bottom features that were previously indistinguishable.
The team will explore various areas using the ROV to compare observations with what appears on the map. This will
allow scientists to associate certain colors and other map features with the type of habitat they indicate, such as sand
bottom, coral ledges, or coral rubble, allowing more accurate assessment of the extent of the reefs and likely
identification of previously unknown coral features.
"Understanding the extent of the reefs and where the most important habitats are will help researchers and
managers determine those areas that need the greatest protection, and those that might require less protection, " says Reed.
Another important focus of the expedition will be to assess populations of snappers and groupers and choose
sections of the reef for initial monitoring surveys to be used as benchmarks. Through comparisons over time with
repeat visits scientists will be able to assess progress in the Oculina Experimental Closed Area for restoring coral
cover and replenishing fish stocks. Recent expeditions have already revealed encouraging signs that fish populations
in this section are slowly but surely increasing. In coming years, researchers hope to see populations of snappers
and groupers recovering enough to again form large breeding aggregations in the area.
"We need to establish a statistically and scientifically sound basis to assess whether the habitat and fisheries
are changing over time, and whether the reserve and enforcement are working," says Reed.
A final goal for the cruise will be to collect samples of Oculina coral whose genetics will be analyzed back on
land and compared against that of Oculina found in shallow water, which is much more common. The purpose
will be to determine if the deepwater version is a distinct species. This information is significant because the
Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group Oceana has petitioned the federal government to include the deepwater
form of Oculina under the Endangered Species Act, which would only be possible if it is in fact a genetically distinct species.
Participating in the expedition are scientists from the NOAA Undersea Research Center at the University of
North Carolina at Wilmington, Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution in Ft. Pierce, the NOAA Southeast Fisheries
Science Center in Miami, the University of Oregon's Institute of Marine Biology in Charleston, the Florida Wildlife
Research Institute in St. Petersburg, and the Vero Beach-based Estuarine, Coastal and Ocean Science, Inc. (ECOS),
and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR JOURNALISTS:
+High-resolution photos as well as b-roll of the Oculina reefs and related research are available.
+There will be space for a limited number of journalists to spend the day offshore on the Liberty Star to observe ROV
dives and speak with the scientists on Oct. 14 and 15. Transportation to and from the ship will be aboard the State of
Florida's enforcement vessel the CT Randall from the Port Canaveral U.S. Coast Guard Station. Journalists who would
like to take part should contact Mark Schrope as soon as possible to reserve a slot and receive security clearance.
Operated by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and dedicated in 2004, the CT Randall's primary
mission is to patrol the OHAPC and the Oculina Experimental Closed Area within to enforce fishing and anchoring
prohibitions. Crewmembers will be available to discuss their experiences.
+Port Day: Scientists and law enforcement personnel will be available to media from 9:00 to 10:30 a.m. on October
12 once the Liberty Star returns to Port Canaveral at the Port Authority's Cruise Terminal 3. Tours of the ship will
also be possible at this time. Later in the morning there will be an open house aboard the ship for local school groups.
Media wishing to attend must contact Mark Schrope by Oct. 10 to get security clearance to enter the dock area.
CONTACTS:
For general expedition and press coverage information: Mark Schrope, Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution, 772-216-0390, schrope@hboi.edu.
Cruise science information: Andrew Shepard, NOAA Undersea Research Center at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, sheparda@uncw.edu, 910-962-2446.
Management information: Kim Iverson, Public Information Officer, South Atlantic Fishery Management Council, kim.iverson@safmc.net, 843-571-4366.
For additional information on management and detailed map products, photos, and video clips of the Oculina Bank, visit:
http://map.mapwise.com/safmc/Home/tabid/35/Default.aspx
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HARBOR BRANCH Oceanographic Institution was founded in Ft. Pierce, Fla., in 1971 to support the exploration and conservation
of the world's oceans. The institution has held to this mission and grown into one of the world's leading oceanographic
institutions with a 500-acre campus, over 200 personnel, and a fleet of sophisticated research ships and submersibles.
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