As Ocean Waters Heat Up, A Quest to Create ‘Super Corals’
04 Aug 2015: Report
As Ocean Waters Heat Up,
A Quest to Create Super Corals
With the worlds coral reefs increasingly threatened by warmer and more acidic seas, scientists are selectively breeding corals to create species with the best chance to survive in the coming century and beyond. Are genetically modified corals next?
by nicola jones
In Hawaii this summer, as corals engage in their once-a-year courtship ritual of releasing sperm and eggs into the water by moonlight, Ruth Gates will oversee a unique mating: the coming together of super-corals in her lab.
Gates and her team at the Institute of Marine Biology in Kaneohe tagged corals in their local waters that thrived through a heinous hot spell last September. A few of those rugged specimens will be picked for arranged marriages this month, hopefully yielding some offspring even better suited to thriving in the warmer waters of the future. It will be, she thinks, the first selective mating of corals to try to help them thrive in the face of climate change.
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Australian Institute of Marine Science
Researcher Madeleine van Oppen collects
coral fragments for her breeding project.
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Gates and her colleague, Madeleine van Oppen at the Australian Institute of Marine Science, have been awarded $3.9 million from Paul G. Allen's philanthropic organization Vulcan Inc. for this and other work into the assisted evolution of corals an attempt to intentionally beef up the genetic stock of reefs to survive the onslaught of climate change. This idea of homing in on super-performers is a no-brainer, says Gates. We have been doing it in the food supply for millennia.
More:
http://e360.yale.edu/feature/as_ocean_waters_heat_up_a_quest_to_create_super_corals/2900/