THE DIRTY CORAL PLAGUE: Researchers
may have found a culprit
responsible for spreading disease in
coral reefs worldwide. Dick Barber of
Duke University told the June
meeting of the U.S. Global Change
Research Program in Washington,
D.C., that a decades-long drought in
the Sahel region of Africa has caused
a five-fold increase in atmospheric
dust that’s carried throughout the
world by African trade winds. The
dust carries plenty of baggage,
including bacteria, viruses, and fungi,
and it’s also rich in iron, which can
fertilize reef-smothering algae.
Barber blames the dust for epidemics
of white band and black band disease
and “coral plague,” especially in the
Caribbean, which receives roughly a
billion tons of atmospheric dust from
Africa each year. Dust is also blamed
for aspergillus fungal devastation of
Caribbean sea fans and severe
declines in diadema sea urchins and
staghorn coral.
AUSSIE CURRENTS GRAB ANOTHER
ONE: Last month we reported on the
ordeal of Paul Lucas, a 37-year-old
British diver who was caught by an
eddy and spent over 24 hours adrift
before he washed up on a barrier
island and was rescued. This month
the Aussies did it again: 80-year-old
Californian Ursula Margaret Clutton
disappeared January 11 while snorkeling
with approximately 300 other
tourists on Agincourt Reef, quite near
the area where Thomas and Eileen
Lonergan vanished in January, 1998.
After a head count by the crew of the
Quicksilver Cruises boat turned up
short, several additional vessels and
half a dozen aircraft were dispatched,
but two days’ searches found no trace
of Clutton, who is presumed
drowned. While Clutton had apparently
been snorkeling without a
buddy, Quicksilver Cruises director
Max Shepherd said that she had been
snorkeling near the boat and that the
company had a look-out on duty.