|
Bikini
Corals Recover From Atomic Blast
Monday, April 14, 2008
Lagoonal
coral reef habitat at Bikini
|
Credit:
ARC Center of Excellence
Half a century after the
last earth-shattering atomic blast shook the Pacific atoll of
Bikini, the corals are flourishing again. Some coral species,
however, appear to be locally extinct.
These are the
findings of a remarkable investigation by an international team
of scientists from Australia, Germany, Italy, Hawaii and the
Marshall Islands. The expedition examined the diversity and
abundance of marine life in the atoll.
One of the most
interesting aspects is that the team dived into the vast Bravo
Crater left in 1954 by the most powerful American atom bomb ever
exploded (15 megatonnes - a thousand times more powerful than the
Hiroshima bomb). The Bravo bomb vaporised three islands, raised
water temperatures to 55,000 degrees, shook islands 200
kilometers away and left a crater 2km wide and 73m deep.
After
diving into the crater, Zoe Richards of the ARC Center of
Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and James Cook University said:
“I didn't know what to expect – some kind of
moonscape perhaps.
"But it was incredible, huge
matrices of branching Porites coral (up to 8 meters high) had
established, creating thriving coral reef habitat.
"Throughout
other parts of the lagoon it was awesome to see coral cover as
high as 80 per cent and large tree-like branching coral
formations with trunks 30cm thick. It was fascinating –
I've never seen corals growing like trees outside of the Marshall
Islands.
“The healthy condition of the coral at
Bikini atoll today is proof of their resilience and ability to
bounce back from massive disturbances, that is, if the reef is
left undisturbed and there are healthy nearby reefs to source the
recovery.”
However, the research has also revealed
a disturbingly high level of loss of coral species from the
atoll.
Compared with a famous study made before the
atomic tests were carried out, the team established that 42
species were missing compared to the early 1950s. At least 28 of
these species losses appear to be genuine local extinctions
probably due to the 23 bombs that were exploded there from
1946-58, or the resulting radioactivity, increased nutrient
levels and smothering from fine sediments.
“The
missing corals are fragile lagoonal specialists – slender
branching or leafy forms that you only find in the sheltered
waters of a lagoon,” Zoe said.
"While corals
in general have shown resilience, Zoe said that the coral
biodiversity at Bikini Atoll had proven only partially resilient
to the disturbances that have occurred there.
Maria Beger
from the Commonwealth Research Facility for Applied Environmental
Decision Analysis at The University of Queensland took a Geiger
counter with her on the expedition.
“The ambient
gamma radiation the residential island of Bikini Atoll was fairly
low – pretty much like the background radiation in an
Australian city," she said.
"However, when I
put the Geiger counter near a coconut, which accumulates
radioactive material from the soil, it went berserk.”
Extensive decontamination works have been carried out at
Bikini Atoll making it safe to visit. However, local produce is
unsafe to eat, and it is unlikely the Bikinian people will return
to live on Bikini Atoll in the near future.
The coral
survey was carried out at the request of the atoll's local
government.
For comparison the team also dived on
neighboring Rongelap Atoll, where no atomic tests were carried
out directly although the atoll was contaminated by radioactive
ash from the Bravo Bomb and local inhabitants were also evacuated
and for the most part, have not returned. The marine environment
at this atoll was found to be in a pristine condition.
The
team thinks that Rongelap Atoll is potentially seeding Bikini's
recovery, because it is the second largest atoll in the world
with a huge amount of coral reef diversity and biomass and lies
upstream from Bikini.
Zoe said that ironically, thanks to
the bombs, Bikini Atoll represented a priceless laboratory
showing how in the absence of ongoing stress, some corals have
the capacity to recover from vast upheavals, which may contain
valuable lessons for the management of reefs in other parts of
the world, including Australia.
“Apart from
occasional forays of illegal shark, tuna and Napoleon Wrasse
fishing, the reef is almost completely undisturbed to this day.
There are very few local inhabitants and the divers who visit,
dive on shipwrecks, like the USS Saratoga, and not on the reef,”
said Maria.
Because of its incredible history and current
undisturbed character, Bikini Atoll is now part of a larger
project to have northern Marshall Island atolls World
Heritage-listed. The expedition served to illustrate the tragic
history of the Bikinian people is not entirely reflected below
the surface because the reefs of Bikini are recovering to present
themselves as havens of abundance to the marine life of the
Northern Pacific Ocean.
The team's report on Bikini
corals surviving atom bombs appears in Elsevier's Marine
Pollution Bulletin No. 56, March 2008 page 5-3-1-515.
Source:
University of Queensland

|
Scientific
Frontline®
RSS
Feeds
Scientific
Frontline®
The
Comm Center
The
E.A.R.®
World
News Report
SFL
Gallery
Cassini
Gallery
Mars
Gallery
Missions
Gallery
Exploration
Gallery
Space
Weather Alerts
Stellar
Nights®
Events
Directors
Chair
Scientific
Frontline®
Is
supported in part by “Readers Like You”
|