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Term Papers on Coral Reefs

Term Paper TitleCoral Reefs
# of Words1291
# of Pages (250 words per page double spaced)5.16

Coral Reefs

Coral reefs are arguably the world’s most beautiful habitats.  Coral reefs have been called the
rainforests of the oceans, because of the rich diversity of life they support.  Scientists have not yet
finished counting the thousands of different species of plants and animals that use or live in the coral
reef.  There are three types of coral reefs: fringing reefs, barrier reefs, and atolls.  Fringing reefs
are located close to shore, separated from land by only shallow water. Barrier reefs lie farther
offshore, separated from land by lagoons more than ten meters deep.  Atolls, on the other hand, are
formed far offshore and they make a ring-shaped reef that close a circular lagoon.  Coral reefs are the
largest biological structures on the planet, with the largest being the Great Barrier Reef covering over
2000 kilometers along the east coast of Australia (Focus, 1995). The reef is said to be 500,000 to
2,500,000 years old and is said to be visible from the moon.(Scientif!
ic, 1987). There is only one problem with this beautiful structure and that is the carelessness of man.
Silt from deforested lands and pollution from crowded coastlines choke them, and overuse by coal miners,
fisheries, and even tourists deplete and destroy coral reefs. There are many more factors which add to
the destruction of the coral reefs, which if not stopped it will destroy all coral reefs.
     Corals are animals, not plants, sunlight is the key to their survival.  They need it to power the
millions of microscopic algae, called zooxanthellae, that live in their tissues. The algae provides the
corals with food and oxygen in return for raw materials and a secure place to live. This teamwork is what
allows the reef to survive in nutrient-poor tropical seas.  This relationship is sensitive to such
changes in the environment as cloudy waters or extreme temperatures.  The stress on the corals can cause
them to expel their algae, a phenomenon known as bleaching(Futurists, 1993).  With the algae gone, the
coral skeleton is visible and eventually it dies. Died corals lead further on to the death of the reef.  
     There are four environmental factors that effect their growth: temperature, salinity, water
depth, and wave action. These factors exposes the reef to changes in the environment very easily
especially since it is located so close to shore. This also makes it hard for all of the species which
use the coral reef to survive. Coral reefs are home to perhaps one-fourth of all marine species.  This in
turns effects the entire ecosystem of the ocean.  Pollution by humans have directly or indirectly caused
the death of 5%-10% of the world’s living reefs, according to marine biologist Clive Wilkinson of the
Australian Institute of Marine Science.  This estimate didn’t take in global warming and ozone depletion
as a factor. The pollution is caused by fisheries, oil spills, deforestation, tourists, and even reckless
divers.  The problems which are getting even bigger is the problem of deforestation and reckless divers.
In the watershed of Bacuit Bay in the Philippines, deforestation inc!
reased erosion into the bay by more that 200 times.(Futurists, 1995)  One of the biggest threats to coral
reefs are tourists.  Last year alone over 1.2 million tourists visited the Great Barrier Reef.
(Star-Bulletin, 1995)  The tourists are not only fisherman and devoted divers they are also scientists
who wanted to see the enormous reef. Every year the numbers of visitors increase by  10%.  It has brought
many resorts to the area who also want to get into fun and making a little money in the $1 billion
business.  Even the hotels and the motels pollute the reefs by their drainage and sewage pipes. This is
causing a huge problem in coastal tourism which is the world’s fastest growing industry, worth over $7
billion annually in the Caribbean.(Star-Bulletin, 1995) Marine Scientists are really worried of how much
longer the reef can survive with all these visitors to the reefs.
     Global warming and...

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