At a time when the battle to save the world’s coral reefs is at “make or break point,” as the head of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Erik Solheim said in January, good news emerged this week from the Gulf of Eilat.

According to the 2017 report by the Israel National Monitoring Program published on Israel’s the Environmental Protection Ministry’s site, corals in the Gulf of Eilat, the world’s most northern reef, are growing, contrary to most reefs around the world.

Between 2004, when monitoring began, and  2017, the INMP revealed a significant rise in coral coverage, averaging 0.5% per year.  At the beginning of the measurement, the average coral coverage in Eilat was 19-20%. Between 2007 to 2012, it increased to 21.5-23.9% and in 2013,  the highest average coverage was reported at 26.4%. Since then the average coral coverage has ranged between 24.1 and 25.3%.

The aim of the program, funded by Israel’s Environmental  Protection Ministry and coordinated by the Interuniversity Institute for Marine Science in Eilat, is to create a long-term database on the state of the marine ecosystem in the Gulf of Eilat as a scientific basis to solve environmental problems, and develop the Israeli coastal and areas.

According to Dr. Jonathan Shaked, the program manager of the scientific report, efforts to inform the public about the importance of the coral reef and better enforcement of the law by the Environmental Protection Ministry are the reasons for the reef’s recent growth.

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“The reef today is much stronger than in the past” Shaked told TPS.  “It is difficult to predict what will happen in the future but if there will be no changes in the state of the sea, the reef will continue to grow. The efforts of the authorities certainly helped the rehabilitation of the coral reef.”

Besides providing habitats and shelter for many marine organisms, coral reefs are also important because they are the source of essential nutrients for marine food chains. An estimated one billion people have some dependence on coral reefs for food and income from fishing. Moreover, coral reefs also break the power of the waves helping to prevent coastal erosion.

Another interesting finding of the report relates to water temperature: Sea surface temperature was close to the multi-annual average throughout most of the year, but July saw a sharp increase, followed by a mass mortality of reef fishes, (427 cases). “The mortality may have originated in a sharp increase in water temperature that perhaps caused an outbreak of a deadly pathogen,” the researchers said.

Sea surface temperatures in Eilat have risen at an average rate of 0.037 degrees per year since 1988 when measurements began.

Source: Israel in the News