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Explorers find hundreds of undescribed corals, other species on familiar Australian reefs
sea-maid submitted, created time 3 months 2 weeks (esciencenews.com)
Hundreds of new kinds of animal species surprised international researchers systematically exploring waters off two islands on the Great Barrier Reef and a reef off northwestern Australia -- waters long familiar to divers. The expeditions, affiliated with the global Census of Marine Life, help mark the International Year of the Reef and included the first systematic scientific inventory of spectacular soft corals, named octocorals for the eight tentacles that fringe each polyp 


Coral-killing starfish curbed by fishing ban
lavrock submitted, created time 5 months 1 week (environment.newscientist.com)
IF YOU want to save coral reefs from rapacious starfish, you should ban fishing.
The crown-of-thorns starfish, Acanthaster planci, preys on corals in some of the most biodiverse and threatened reefs in the world, dwarfing coral losses from storms and bleaching. The predator is less devastating in "no-take zones" of Australia's Great Barrier Reef, however, where fishing has been banned since 1989 (Current Biology, vol 18, p R598) 


Fishing Bans May Save Corals from Killer Starfish
sea-maid submitted, created time 5 months 1 week (www.sciam.com)
Good news for the world's vanishing corals: a new study shows that commercial fishing bans in Australia's Great Barrier Reef kept a lid on coral-gobbling starfish.
"This is definitely good news for coral," says John Bruno, an associate professor of marine science at the University of North Carolina (U.N.C.) at Chapel Hill.
Researchers found that there were as many as seven times fewer outbreaks of coral-killing crown-of-thorns starfish—which can have up to twenty spike-covered arms and grow up to two feet (0 


Researchers study coral threats
sumsung submitted, created time 11 months 1 week (edition.cnn.com)
The year of the reef is a "campaign to highlight the importance of coral reef ecosystems and to motivate people to protect them," Conrad Lautenbacher, head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said at a briefing. 


sumsung submitted, created time 1 year 2 weeks (www.news.cornell.edu)
If world leaders do not immediately engage in a race against time to save the Earth's coral reefs, these vital ecosystems will not survive the global warming and acidification predicted for later this century. 
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