Scientists reproduce coral in US lab, offering hope for reefs

Sand Tiger sharks and a barracuda swim in a tank at the Florida Aquarium exposing Florida’s natural ecosystem on 22 August at Apollo Beach, Florida. Photo: AFP
Sand Tiger sharks and a barracuda swim in a tank at the Florida Aquarium exposing Florida’s natural ecosystem on 22 August at Apollo Beach, Florida. Photo: AFP

A team of scientists in the US have managed to reproduce coral in a lab setting for the first time ever, an encouraging step in the race to save "America's Great Barrier Reef" off the coast of Florida.

The researchers from Florida Aquarium's Centre for Conservation were able to reproduce endangered Atlantic Pillar coral through induced spawning, a development that could ultimately prevent the extinction of the Florida Reef tract.

"This amazing breakthrough was the first time that we spawned Atlantic corals in a laboratory setting that we've had for over a year in our greenhouses," Amber Whittle, the aquarium's director for conservation, told AFP Monday.

"It's been done before at the Horniman Museum in London with Pacific corals, never with Atlantic corals, and the Pillar coral that we spawned is a highly endangered species."

Pillar corals in a water tank at the labs of The Florida Aquarium Conservation Center in Apollo Beach where recently the spawning occurred on 22 August in Apollo Beach, Florida. Photo: AFP

The Florida Aquarium and the Horniman Museum began working together in 2015 on induced reproduction techniques.

Reproduction was achieved by mimicking the conditions of the corals' natural environment, including sunrises, sunsets, moon phases, water temperature and quality.

Florida's corals are deteriorating rapidly due to climate change and a destructive tissue disease that appeared in the waters of the southeastern state in 2014.

Scientists hope to reproduce healthy corals and repopulate the reefs through this technique.