While some beautiful reefs near Cousteau
Fiji have been ravaged by the
crown-of-thorns starfish, it has also been
eating away at 40 percent of the Cairns
section of the Great Barrier Reef, says
Australian researcher Udo Engelhardt.
"The current outbreak follows the pattern of two previous outbreaks 15
and 30 years ago," he said. "The apparent synchrony of outbreaks on both
the Great Barrier Reef and other reefs throughout the tropics suggest that
a large-scale, natural phenomenon could be the trigger for the outbreaks."
The starfish feeds on hard coral, removing all living tissue. Most reefs
can handle up to 30 of these starfish per 2.5 acres, but in the most recent
outbreak, detected two years ago, some parts of the Great Barrier Reef had
up to 1,200 starfish in the same space. It is unknown whether water pollution,
overfishing of the starfish's natural predators, or any other human
factor triggers the outbreaks.
Injecting the starfish with sodium bisulfate, an environmentally benign
chemical, is one control measure, but Engelhardt said that "it would be
impossible and a waste of time and money to attempt anything more than
small-scale clearing in areas important to tourism."