Less Intermediate 4-9

Lesson 4





Documento sin título

Parrotfish to aid reef repair
By Rebecca Morelle
BBC News
A vividly coloured fish could be the key to saving the Caribbean’s coral reefs from plummeting into terminal decline, scientists claim.
Their research forecasts that reefs risk being damaged beyond repair by the influx of seaweed.
But urgent action such as protecting parrotfish, which graze upon the floral invaders, may prevent the ecosystems from reaching this tipping point.
The research is published in the journal Nature.
Professor Peter Mumby, a marine ecologist from Exeter University and lead author of the paper, said: "We are seeing more and more coral reefs becoming just overgrown with seaweed."
Reefs in the Caribbean are among some of the most heavily affected. They are rapidly transforming from coral-dominated domains into algal-flooded havens.
The seaweed growth is boosted by human activity, such as fertilizers washing off from agricultural land into the coastal waters, and over-fishing, Professor Mumby explained.
"Then to compound these problems you have the climate stresses that are more and more inevitable now, which cause major problems with warming waters and hurricanes," he added.

Cruising around
Professor Mumby and colleagues used computer simulations to predict whether reefs could bounce back once the seaweed had taken hold, especially if some of the pressures upon them were removed.
He told the BBC News website: "A reef can become almost permanently unhealthy.
"We found you can push a reef so far and then it becomes extremely difficult for a reef to recover – it’s like the straw that broke the camel’s back."
This would be devastating to the hundreds of species that reefs play host to, as well as the millions of people who rely on them for their livelihoods, he added.
The team said that urgent action needed to be taken to prevent the reefs from reaching this tipping point.
Professor Mumby said: "The key message is that you have to act fast.
"It is not OK to wait until a reef is in a degraded state and to say: ‘now we are going to act’; we need to stop these reefs getting unhealthy in the first place."
One simple measure to prevent reefs from becoming damaged beyond repair, he said, would be to protect parrotfish that live around the reef.
"Parrotfish cruise around, grazing away much of the seaweed. They play a very important role in the ecosystem," the researcher explained.
However, these tropical fish are under threat. They are a sought-after delicacy in many parts of the Caribbean and are susceptible to becoming caught in fish traps.
Professor Mumby said: "We need to manage them as a fishery and maintain large numbers of these fish.
"The ability of a reef to recover is much more difficult if you remove parrotfish."
©BBC MMVII
Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7069933.stm

 

Phrases:

?The straw that broke the camel’s back?: This means that of all negative things that have happened the last thing caused the most damage. (related to ?the last straw?)

Example:  My roommate never cleans up.  Yesterday I found his garbage in the hallway, it was the straw that broke the camel?s back. I yelled at him for an hour.

I quit my job because my boss yelling at me again was the straw that broke the camel?s back.

 

?Damaged beyond repair?: This means that something has been ruined or damaged so badly that it can never be fixed or restored to original condition.

Example: Due to the accident, the car was damaged beyond repair.

My cell phone was damaged beyond repair when I dropped it on the ground.

True or False:

1. The reefs are covered in grasses.


2. Scientists are using tuna fish to stop the damage being done to the reefs.


3. Fertilizers are causing the seaweed growth to increase.


4. Parrotfish feed off of the seaweed that is covering the reefs.


5. The parrotfish are in danger because people catch them for food.



 


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