Coral reefs are built and made up of thousands of tiny animals called coral “polyps” that can live individually (like many mushroom corals do) or in large colonies that comprise an entire reef structure. A polyp has a sac-like body and an opening, or mouth, encircled by stinging tentacles called nematocysts or cnidae (imagine an upside down jellyfish). The polyp extracts calcium and carbonate ions from seawater to build itself a hard, cup-shaped skeleton made of calcium carbonate (limestone). This limestone skeleton protects the soft, delicate body of the polyp. Coral polyps are usually nocturnal, meaning that they stay inside their skeletons during the day. At night, polyps extend their tentacles to feed. Most coral polyps have clear bodies whereas their skeletons are completely white, like human bones. Generally, their brilliant color comes from the zooxanthellae (tiny algae) living inside their tissues. Several million zooxanthellae live and produce pigments in just one square inch of coral. These pigments are visible through the clear body of the polyp and are what gives coral its beautiful color.
In some unfortunate cases, much like we can see in nature, there are some dead fragments on your frame such as this one pictured. This is often the result when corals undergoes very high level of stress where they cannot seem to recover. This is not because your frame isn’t suitable, but since all the fragments were collected from the sand they already received lots of stress before attached onto your frame, so it happens from time to time that fragments might receive further high stress levels due to increased water temperatures and they lose the symbiotic algae Zooxanthellae that they need to survive. They will turn bleach white and if stress conditions persist they will die completely since they have no more animals for feeding or defending the corals and then they are often competing with invasive algae that grow over the polyps when this happens they will also die off. During the maintenance these pieces of dead coral is usually removed while the live part remains attached.
The Dascyllus aruanus, known commonly as humbug damselfish, has found in your coral frame its home. This particular fish is known by multiple common names, such as three stripe damselfish, humbug dascyllus, or black and white damselfish. They only reach an adult size of 3-4 inches (7.6-10 cm). Sporting three broad black stripes on a white body, the humbug damselfish has a zebra like appearance. The stripes run slightly off vertical through the eyes and mouth, midbody and bisecting the caudal peduncle, making it half black and half white. There are several contestants for the title of most important reef fish family, but the Damselfish are certainly one of the front-runners. Not only are there numerous species, but also many of these species are present on Maldivian reefs in prodigious numbers. The humbug damselfish that you can see in the picture is associated with isolated coral heads in sheltered inshore habitats. Like all damselfish, they can be territorial and aggressive, especially as they get older.
As you can see from the picture, your coral frame are colonized by some little, brown and green organisms called Ascidia. The species is called Didemnum molle (also known as the green barrel sea squirt or the green reef sea-squirt.) and is very common in the Indo-Pacific area. Ascidia is a filter-feeder, feeding on suspended plankton and detritus and its green color is given by the algae living in symbiosis with them, in this way the algae is protected by the predation and the Ascidia can receive energy from its little hosts. Luckily they don’t possess any threat to the corals when they are few in numbers, however they can colonize quite quickly on the frames through asexual budding, as such they are regularly removed to minimize competition with growing corals.
Coral reefs are built and made up of thousands of tiny animals called coral “polyps” that can live individually (like many mushroom corals do) or in large colonies that comprise an entire reef structure. A polyp has a sac-like body and an opening, or mouth, encircled by stinging tentacles called nematocysts or cnidae (imagine an upside down jellyfish). The polyp extracts calcium and carbonate ions from seawater to build itself a hard, cup-shaped skeleton made of calcium carbonate (limestone). This limestone skeleton protects the soft, delicate body of the polyp. Coral polyps are usually nocturnal, meaning that they stay inside their skeletons during the day. At night, polyps extend their tentacles to feed. Most coral polyps have clear bodies whereas their skeletons are completely white, like human bones. Generally, their brilliant color comes from the zooxanthellae (tiny algae) living inside their tissues. Several million zooxanthellae live and produce pigments in just one square inch of coral. These pigments are visible through the clear body of the polyp and are what gives coral its beautiful color.
A fresh scar from a broken branch, the white indicate the calcium skeleton underneath that is produced by the tiny polys above year after year. Since collected fragments are picked up rather than broken down from existing colonies they often have dead sections covered with overgrowing algae and dead or damaged polyps, as such these sections are removed for faster recovery. You can already see the new polyps starting to grow along the bottom of the scar, soon the branch will regrow into its former state.
Do you know that even under the water we can found cobwebs? The responsible invertebrate responsible for this mesh is not a spider, but rather a gastropod mollusk called Ceraesignum maximum. As all Vermeidae, this mollusk species is sessile and houses themselves within tubular shells. They are common dwellers of shallow water in coral reefs and rocky shores. These nets are called mucus nets that can be expand around the individual up to 10 cm in diameter. Under wave action and currents allow suspended particles to be trapped in these sticky nets that are withdrawn at regular intervals for consumption.
This is your 6 month frame progress update. Unfortunately your frame is struggling!
Looking at your frame, we can notice lots of bleached corals as well as dead coral fragments. Unfortunately the warm months of March, April and May have been really rough on your frame. We are trying our best to keep the damage to a minimum by cleaning harmful algae off bleached corals. We also started moving extremely bleached frames under the Water Villa Restaurant to protect them from further damage through UV radiation. We hope to see some of your bleached corals recover over the next couple of months, but it will be a slow process. Now that the water temperatures are slightly decreasing the next step of action will be to replace dead coral fragments with new healthy fragments.
Over the following months we will continue with maintenance to keep harmful algae and predators off your frame and to give your frame the best chance for successful growth.
We have some unfortunate news this month as we are starting to see some evidence of bleaching around the coral frames. Coral bleaching can be ascribed to warming ocean waters for extended periods of time where the symbiotic algae (Zooxanthellae) living inside the tissue coral is expelled by their host and in turn leave behind a bleaching white skeleton. This algae shares a mutualistic relationship with the corals; the coral provides shelter to the algae and in turn the algae can provide as much as 90% of the nutrients produced by photosynthesis which is used towards their growth. Corals can survive bleaching events such as this, but if they are subject to more stress or prolonged heated waters, they will surely die. Unfortunately, your frame is also showing moderate signs of bleaching of around 40%. This is a rough estimate based on the amount of bleaching fragments of the entire frame. As you can see from the images, their white skeletons are not something anyone can miss, especially in the water. The degree of bleaching on your frame varies from fragment to fragment and ranges anything between minor bleaching on the branching tips, surface bleaching (those directly exposed to the sun’s rays), intermediate bleaching (still some symbiotic algae present) with few being completely bleached.
Unfortunately, there is not much we can do at this stage, but wait to see whether they recover or not in the next months. Should they not recover and they are completely dead, they will be removed from the frame and replaced with new live ones. This is of course a major setback for our coral conservation project, but it is also the reality we are dealing with today.
Here you will see the partial shape of the cable tie that we used to stabilize this particular fragment to the iron frame. In one month we can already see that this Acropora have started to overgrow this plastic tie and will soon be part of the skeleton forever. Plastic cable ties are a good compromise for attaching corals to the structure, since the material is cheap, resistant and the results are great, however we are looking into using different materials to improve our techniques of reducing plastics in the ocean. When this colony have reached the minimum size for spawning it will release its gametes in the water that ultimately leads to the formation of new colonies elsewhere on the reef.
This beautiful creature known as the reeftop pipefish (Corythoichthys haematopterus) but is also known as the Bloodspot pipefish, Dragonface Pipefish or Yellowstreaked Pipefish. The Pipefish is in family with the Seahorse and has the same head and snout. Pipefish feeds on small animals on the bottom which they suck whole into their mouth. They are often difficult to see when they are on the sandy corals as their colors camouflage them very well. They are a common species around the coral frames and are often spotted moving in and out from the frame. They can grow up to 30 cm in length and usually found at depths of around 0 – 20 meters. Interesting fact is that the Pipefish are like seahorses in that the male gives birth! The female deposits their eggs after fertilisation into the males pouch located under their tail to incubate the eggs for one month before giving birth.
Looking at one of the species on your frame, this is the Acropora austera species, part of the Acropora genus, with over 150 species described and the fastest growing species of hard corals in the world. Colonies form thickets that may cover many square metres and their branches are fairly thick and most tend to be slightly curved. Colonies are present on outer slopes and in lagoons where turbulence is greater, but range from rare to common at individual sites. The species has characteristic radial corallites which are densely packed and thick walled, giving the appearance of being spherical beads densely crowded together on the branches. Their colour is can vary from cream to light brown.
When corals are stressed by changes in water conditions such as temperature, light intensity, or nutrients, they expel the symbiotic algae living inside their tissues, causing them to turn completely white, this is also known as coral bleaching. When a coral bleaches, it is not dead, but may soon starve if conditions persist. If their stress levels are not severe, corals may recover. If the algae loss is prolonged and the stress continues, coral eventually dies. Here in the Maldives, the peak temperature is around March – June, when we also see some of the corals turn white, usually their colors return soon after if conditions don’t persist.
Fish are the usually the first vertebrates that colonizes the frames. The more the corals grow, the more fish will arrive. Here they can find shelter and food almost on every frame. Your coral frame has been visited by the small wrasse on the left of the picture. It is an herbivorous fish which has an important role: cleaning the frame from algae. In fact, invasive algae may compete with corals reducing and/or slowing down their growth. The system work independently from our maintenance once herbivorous fish are abundant.