Singapore News

Concrete reefs return to help coral recovery in Malaysia

POM POM ISLAND, Malaysia – The small boat set off from a tiny island in the western Pacific Ocean, its destination only a short distance away. Its cargo was dozens of chunks of concrete that each weighed 27kg, had a textured surface and evoked a white lotus leaf. One by one, the crew tossed the pieces overboard. Then three divers descended 8.8m to the seabed with nuts, bolts and steel rods. As they began fastening the concrete pieces on top of one another, hundreds of

curious damselfish gathered around them, and three green turtles circled nearby. Within an hour, the structure was complete: an artificial reef standing 1m tall and 3m wide. This construction near Pom Pom Island, Malaysia, is part of an effort to rejuvenate a small section of the Coral Triangle, which covers a wide section of South-east Asia and is the most biodiverse marine region in the world. Pom Pom Island lies off the north-eastern coast of Borneo, an area where fishermen have for decades used homemade

dynamite to kill schools of fish. The practice, which has long been illegal in Malaysia, is common among local anglers, who say they cannot earn enough money from the smaller catches they make using conventional methods. But kilometres of coral reef have become collateral damage. “The seabed here is like a desert, and this is one structure bringing life back,” said Robin Philippo, managing director of the Tropical Research and Conservation Centre (TRACC), the conservation group that installed the artificial reef. Over the past two

years, it has installed more than 60 of these structures around the island, each weighing about half a tonne and costing about US$5,000 (S$6,400). The corrugated surfaces allow corals to take hold, while the gaps between the individual pieces provide shelter from predators for marine life. “Before the structures were placed, it was just rubble on the seabed and no fishes,” said Alvin Chelliah, chief programmes officer at Reef Check Malaysia, a non-profit. “But now we can see damselfishes, juvenile groupers, butterfly fishes are making

a comeback at the artificial reef structures.” Still, he warned, “the concrete reef is not a silver bullet”. Concrete reefs are less likely to support marine life that typically drills into natural reef surfaces, like boring giant clams, Chelliah said. In recent years, Malaysia has lost about 20 per cent of its coral cover, largely because of rising ocean temperatures that have accelerated coral bleaching, according to Reef Check Malaysia. This can have devastating consequences on food security. Near Pom Pom Island, where the main

enterprise is tourism, TRACC is planning to install another 100 reef structures, partly funded by a US$100,000 grant from the Coral Research and Development Accelerator Platform, a non-profit based in Saudi Arabia. TRACC makes individual reef pieces using a mould made by Reef Design Lab, an Australian firm that also designs the units. Less than 18 months after the first structure was set up in the waters around Pom Pom Island, which can be covered on foot in an hour or so, 500 young corals

had settled on it, said TRACC. A team of five scientists is monitoring the results. Fish numbers and diversity in the vicinity had also improved significantly. “My observations show good recruitment of a wide range of organisms, like oysters, sponges and corals, attached to the structures,” said Scott Bryan, an earth scientist from Queensland University of Technology in Australia who is an adviser for the project. Still, other experts worry that the scale of recovery remains small and that these efforts do not replace the

need to reduce carbon emissions. “A single artificial structure is a tiny drop in the ocean,” said Terry Hughes, an eminent coral scientist and professor emeritus at James Cook University in Australia. “Pouring carbon-intensive concrete to save coral reefs is no substitute for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.” Bryan said TRACC was using local sand at Pom Pom Island to cast the artificial reefs, so the project’s carbon footprint was low. It hopes to bring the structures to Tioman Island, a popular tourist destination off Peninsular

Malaysia’s east coast, where reefs have been battered by monsoonal storms. The test could show whether the structures can survive rough waters and whether early signs of success can be replicated on a larger scale. “Though it is a small area at a time,” Bryan said, “it is changing and improving.” NYTIMES This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Malaysia, Pom Pom Island, coral reefs, artificial reef, TRACC, Reef Check Malaysia, Coral Triangle, dynamite fishing, coral bleaching, Tioman Island, carbon emissions

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