Cryogenically Frozen Coral

Just as seed banks have been developed to protect the future of food, the Global Coral Repository will collect biopsies of various coral species to protect our oceans’ future.

The Haereticus Environmental Laboratory is a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving environmental restoration efforts through research. Scientists there have developed a technology that enables coral propagation from near-microscopic tissue biopsies. These samples can be cultured and grown into adult coral in a process that can spawn millions of offspring from a single sample of genetic material.

Bikini-clad snorkeler swims over yellow corals

Along with the propagation technology, scientists at Haereticus have also developed methods of cryogenically freezing coral samples, preserving them in a living and reproductively viable state. A series of international repositories will store the samples, ensuring the more than 5,000 known coral species are protected. The first repository is at the Haereticus lab in Virginia; the next will be at Oxford University and is expected to be operational in 2012. The hope is that more repositories will be developed around the world in the near future. The collection process is projected to take about 40 years.

Not only do these repositories provide an opportunity to preserve earth’s coral species, they will also allow researchers to investigate the factors contributing to coral decline, learn how to conserve existing coral populations, propagate archived species and restore impacted reefs. In addition, the repositories create a global inventory of coral species and a forensic database for use in cases where coral is transported across international boundaries. “The repositories will maintain a DNA fingerprint for every coral species as well as a geographic identity for each specimen,” said Craig Downs, executive director of the Global Coral Repository. “Using DNA fingerprinting technology and specimen analysis, we should be able to determine a specimen’s origin, aiding in the law-enforcement efforts of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species and other regulations.”

To be eligible for deposit, the samples must come from healthy coral colonies, which divers can help identify. According to Downs, each region will have a list of visual characteristics divers can use to confirm reef health, including coral coverage, species diversity and coral recruitment. “Divers can provide photo documentation and GPS coordinates of a candidate ‘healthy’ reef, which will significantly contribute to the ultimate goals of the Global Coral Repository.” The collection effort will begin in the Florida Keys.

© Alert Diver — Q1 Winter 2012