The sunscreen you dutifully put on before a dive or
snorkel may prevent sunburn, but its chemicals are killing
coral reefs worldwide. A study in the journal Environmental
Health Perspectives states that four common sunscreen
ingredients can awaken viruses in an algae called
Zooxanthellae that lives inside reef-building coral species.
The chemicals cause the viruses to replicate until their
algae hosts explode, spilling viruses into the surrounding
seawater, where they can infect neighboring coral communities.
Zooxanthellae provides coral with food energy
through photosynthesis and contributes to corals’ vibrant
color. Without it, the coral bleaches white and dies.
The study’s researchers looked at the effects of sunscreen
exposure on coral samples from reefs in the Pacific,
Atlantic, and Indian Oceans. Seawater surrounding the
coral exposed to sunscreen contained up to 15 times
more viruses than unexposed samples. Researchers found that even low levels of sunscreen, at or below the typical
amount used by swimmers, could activate the algae
viruses and completely bleach coral in just four days. They
estimate that 4,000 to 6,000 metric tons of sunscreen wash
off swimmers, snorkelers and divers annually in oceans
worldwide, and that up to 10 percent of coral reefs are
threatened by sunscreen-induced bleaching.
Several brands of popular sunscreens were tested and
all had four ingredients in common: paraben, cinnamate,
benzophenone, and a camphor derivative. Banning sunscreen
isn’t necessary. To reduce their impact on coral,
divers and snorkelers can use sunscreens with titanium
dioxide and zinc oxide, which reflect instead of absorb
ultraviolet radiation. Some eco-friendly sunscreens that
meet those standards come from Caribbean Solutions
(www.caribbean-sol.com) and from Aubrey Organics
(www.aubrey-organics.com)