Biorock aka Coral Viagra

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coconut

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MNN.com > Earth Matters > Climate & Weather
To rebuild coral reefs quickly, just add electricity
Biorock reefs — sunken steel frames connected to a low-voltage current — are giving coral a second chance at surviving humanity.
MICHAEL D'ESTRIES
May 27, 2016, 3:12 p.m.
533

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bioroc-reef.jpg.653x0_q80_crop-smart.jpg

Biorock reefs may offer a speedy solution to giving young coral reefs some much-needed protection against climate change. (Photo: Global Coral Reefs Alliance/Eunjae Im)

You may have heard that coral reefs are in trouble. Serious trouble. A recent survey of Australia's Great Barrier Reef, the largest living structure on the planet, found 93 percent of the coral has been impacted by bleaching; a stark warning sign that the ecosystem is under tremendous environmental stresses.

The potential underwater losses are so great, encompassing an area of the size of Scotland, that one leading coral researcher is already calling it the country's "biggest ever environmental disaster."


With the clock ticking, the race is on to find innovative ways to counter the mass deaths of coral reefs worldwide. The most obvious solution is to stop dumping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere to avoid a future of hotter, more acidic oceans. Scientists are also targeting so-called "super corals" in an effort to mass produce species more resistant to climate change. The third involves rebuilding coral reefs using steel frames and, most surprising, a steady current of electricity.





In September 2018, the conservation group Reef Ecologic partnered with the tourism organization Quicksilver Connections to install the steel frames in the first trial run on the Great Barrier Reef in hopes it will encourage the reef to grow. This technology has been around for years and implemented in other reefs around the world.

Called "Biorocks," these steel-framed structures can sometimes appear to be more akin to an underwater art project than a coral incubator. The steel can take on any shape, but the most important piece of the puzzle is the low-voltage electricity coursing through the frame. The idea, patented in 1979, is the brainchild of marine scientist Wolf Hilbertz and marine biologist Thomas J. Goreau. Together, the pair discovered that an electric current passed through sea water creates a chemical reaction that results in a coating of limestone minerals similar in composition to the natural ones created by young coral.

"These currents are safe to humans and all marine organisms," explains the Gili Eco Trust, a nonprofit that has setup over 100 Biorock structures around islands in Indonesia. "There is no limit in principle to the size or shape of Biorock structures, they could be grown hundreds of miles long if funding allowed. The limestone is the best substrate for hard coral."

The video below shows how a Biorock structure is made and installed on a coral reef.





Once a Biorock structure is submerged, organizers transplant broken fragments of live coral (often ripped from reefs by strong waves, anchors or other forces) and attach them to the frame. Electricity is provided by either an underwater cable from shore or from floating solar panels. Reef-building groups are also starting to experiment with wave-generation to power the frames. Once turned on, it only takes a matter of days before the structure is covered in a thin layer of limestone. Within months, the coral has taken hold and begins to flourish.

"No one believes what we do is possible until they see it themselves," co-inventor Thomas Goreau told Gaia Discovery. "Growing bright coral reefs swarming with fish in a few years in places that were barren deserts is something everybody thinks can't be done, but has been done in nearly 30 countries with only small donations, mostly from local people who remember how their reef used to be and realize they must grow more corals now.”

In the video below, one such local in Bali takes us on a dive and explains how he nurtures coral growth around a Biorock.





According to the Global Coral Reef Alliance, a nonprofit of which Goreau is the president, Biorock reefs not only help speed the growth of coral, but also make them more resistant to stress-inducing temperature and acidity increases.

So why hasn't more of the marine science community shifted to rebuilding coral reefs using the Biorock method? The first reason has to do with feasibility, since it's not always easy to run a low-voltage cable from shore to the reef. Thanks to the rise of solar and tidal energy solutions, this obstacle has become less of a problem. The second, according to one marine scientist, has to do with an absence of published studies showing the process is actually worth pursuing.

"It certainly does appear to work," Tom Moore, a coral restoration coordinator at the the National Oceanic and Atmosphere Administration, told Smithsonian Magazine. He added that the scientific community has been slow to embrace over the lack of independent validation. That said, and with coral reefs around the world facing worse odds as the years tick by, Moore says he'll like give the process a try.

"We’re actively looking for new techniques," he added. "I want to keep a very much open mind."
 

BonifayRam

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Vernon
MNN.com > Earth Matters > Climate & Weather
To rebuild coral reefs quickly, just add electricity
Biorock reefs — sunken steel frames connected to a low-voltage current — are giving coral a second chance at surviving humanity.
MICHAEL D'ESTRIES
May 27, 2016, 3:12 p.m.
533

Tweet

12

bioroc-reef.jpg.653x0_q80_crop-smart.jpg

Biorock reefs may offer a speedy solution to giving young coral reefs some much-needed protection against climate change. (Photo: Global Coral Reefs Alliance/Eunjae Im)

You may have heard that coral reefs are in trouble. Serious trouble. A recent survey of Australia's Great Barrier Reef, the largest living structure on the planet, found 93 percent of the coral has been impacted by bleaching; a stark warning sign that the ecosystem is under tremendous environmental stresses.

The potential underwater losses are so great, encompassing an area of the size of Scotland, that one leading coral researcher is already calling it the country's "biggest ever environmental disaster."


With the clock ticking, the race is on to find innovative ways to counter the mass deaths of coral reefs worldwide. The most obvious solution is to stop dumping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere to avoid a future of hotter, more acidic oceans. Scientists are also targeting so-called "super corals" in an effort to mass produce species more resistant to climate change. The third involves rebuilding coral reefs using steel frames and, most surprising, a steady current of electricity.





In September 2018, the conservation group Reef Ecologic partnered with the tourism organization Quicksilver Connections to install the steel frames in the first trial run on the Great Barrier Reef in hopes it will encourage the reef to grow. This technology has been around for years and implemented in other reefs around the world.

Called "Biorocks," these steel-framed structures can sometimes appear to be more akin to an underwater art project than a coral incubator. The steel can take on any shape, but the most important piece of the puzzle is the low-voltage electricity coursing through the frame. The idea, patented in 1979, is the brainchild of marine scientist Wolf Hilbertz and marine biologist Thomas J. Goreau. Together, the pair discovered that an electric current passed through sea water creates a chemical reaction that results in a coating of limestone minerals similar in composition to the natural ones created by young coral.

"These currents are safe to humans and all marine organisms," explains the Gili Eco Trust, a nonprofit that has setup over 100 Biorock structures around islands in Indonesia. "There is no limit in principle to the size or shape of Biorock structures, they could be grown hundreds of miles long if funding allowed. The limestone is the best substrate for hard coral."

The video below shows how a Biorock structure is made and installed on a coral reef.





Once a Biorock structure is submerged, organizers transplant broken fragments of live coral (often ripped from reefs by strong waves, anchors or other forces) and attach them to the frame. Electricity is provided by either an underwater cable from shore or from floating solar panels. Reef-building groups are also starting to experiment with wave-generation to power the frames. Once turned on, it only takes a matter of days before the structure is covered in a thin layer of limestone. Within months, the coral has taken hold and begins to flourish.

"No one believes what we do is possible until they see it themselves," co-inventor Thomas Goreau told Gaia Discovery. "Growing bright coral reefs swarming with fish in a few years in places that were barren deserts is something everybody thinks can't be done, but has been done in nearly 30 countries with only small donations, mostly from local people who remember how their reef used to be and realize they must grow more corals now.”

In the video below, one such local in Bali takes us on a dive and explains how he nurtures coral growth around a Biorock.





According to the Global Coral Reef Alliance, a nonprofit of which Goreau is the president, Biorock reefs not only help speed the growth of coral, but also make them more resistant to stress-inducing temperature and acidity increases.

So why hasn't more of the marine science community shifted to rebuilding coral reefs using the Biorock method? The first reason has to do with feasibility, since it's not always easy to run a low-voltage cable from shore to the reef. Thanks to the rise of solar and tidal energy solutions, this obstacle has become less of a problem. The second, according to one marine scientist, has to do with an absence of published studies showing the process is actually worth pursuing.

"It certainly does appear to work," Tom Moore, a coral restoration coordinator at the the National Oceanic and Atmosphere Administration, told Smithsonian Magazine. He added that the scientific community has been slow to embrace over the lack of independent validation. That said, and with coral reefs around the world facing worse odds as the years tick by, Moore says he'll like give the process a try.

"We’re actively looking for new techniques," he added. "I want to keep a very much open mind."
Interesting stuff...is this the stuff that's been piling up @ the bottom & killing my electric water heater elements?

How much coal must be burned dumping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere to power up all these undersea rocks? Maybe they can use some windfarms offshore but those wind machines are mega bird killers. Could be a way to get rid of worthless seagulls;).
 
Last edited:

LesBaker

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It's great news for the oceans worldwide that are being damaged.

And the plastic issue needs to be addressed globally. It's out of control.
 

EastRam

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Interesting stuff...is this the stuff that's been piling up @ the bottom & killing my electric water heater elements?

How much coal must be burned dumping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere to power up all these undersea rocks? Maybe they can use some windfarms offshore but those wind machines are mega bird killers. Could be a way to get rid of worthless seagulls;).

That's fucking hilarious! Smooth. Lol
 

Farr Be It

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Cool story bro :cool:

http://www.newsofinterest.tv/global_warming/effects/extinction/coral_reefs.php

the coral thing is FAKE NEWS. But that contraption is interesting. (n) As one guy noted, though, It may not be as nature-friendly as we think.

It's great news for the oceans worldwide that are being damaged.

And the plastic issue needs to be addressed globally. It's out of control.

This should actually be more the focus. I remember when I was in the USCG we would just dump garbage off the stern- plastic and all. (Just standard practice worldwide when more than 20 miles off shore.) Sickening. It always wondered, even in the mid '80s, why we couldn't just have a garbage compactor on board and just unload in ports.

Hopefully things have changed for the better. We should not be polluting the oceans.
 

LesBaker

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the coral thing is FAKE NEWS.

Pump the brakes on that.

And that website is a conspiracy theory nutjob mess. Pimping Alex Jones??? Really???

LOL. Change the channel @Farr Be It

Sickening. It always wondered, even in the mid '80s, why we couldn't just have a garbage compactor on board and just unload in ports.

I don't know if you have seen any of the documentaries about the garbage patches in the oceans around the world but if you haven't you should Google it. It'll break your heart to see what is happening to marine life. A whale recently washed up on shore, dead, and during the autopsy it was discovered to have about 50 pounds of plastic in it's stomach. It was carrying a dead fetus. I don't know id the two are related, but it's not good obviously.

Plastic, once a hugely beneficial thing to society has turned into one of the biggest environmental messes we have created.
 

Farr Be It

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Pump the brakes on that.

And that website is a conspiracy theory nutjob mess. Pimping Alex Jones??? Really???

LOL. Change the channel @Farr Be It



I don't know if you have seen any of the documentaries about the garbage patches in the oceans around the world but if you haven't you should Google it. It'll break your heart to see what is happening to marine life. A whale recently washed up on shore, dead, and during the autopsy it was discovered to have about 50 pounds of plastic in it's stomach. It was carrying a dead fetus. I don't know id the two are related, but it's not good obviously.

Plastic, once a hugely beneficial thing to society has turned into one of the biggest environmental messes we have created.

Ah! Attack the source again Les? Some things never change. That is what you do when the issue is conceded.

Did you read the article? Note the facts? Note the sourcing? ( hint: none of it was Alex Jones.)

Here’s another bloke to put things in perspective. Enjoy! (But pay attention to the actual INFORMATION)


View: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=bcjaQYcsr-w
 

LesBaker

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If the source is shit it deserves to be smacked down. That site is pimping Alex Jones. Puleeeezzeee!!!!

The YouTube vid is a different topic altogether.

Sorry NO SALE.
 

LesBaker

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Ah! Attack the source again Les? Some things never change. That is what you do when the issue is conceded.

@Farr Be It you can call "fake news" all you want. This issue isn't conceded. You are flat out WRONG.

You just provided a link to a website that supports Alex Jones who has been a huge source of "fake news" and now that he is getting his fat ass sued for it he is recanting. Chbildren were killed all over the US and he called it a lie and said that it was staged. And your "source" supports him.

That source is SHIT. Complete and total shit.

A shit source is a shit source. And calling that out isn't an attack, it's just a fact. This is just you saying you don't like to hear the real truth about a really disgusting website because you like it. Maybe you are a member. I don't know.

Look at their homepage. It a total shitshow and rife with bullshit. Really, really serious bullshit.

I think it's funny that the people who always say "fake news" don't actually have any grounded sources of news.

http://www.newsofinterest.tv/index.php

Do you actually think any of this is true? These are headlines and bylines from that "source" that I called garbage. This is on their home page. And there is lots of other stuff.

"Trump often makes Illuminati hand signals"

"Be frightened of working mother candidates"

"The United States has secretly been importing millions of Islamic immigrants from overseas for decades".

"A history of the use of Eugenics by the Ruling Elite"

And it has articles that blame 9/11 on the "Global Elite".

Change the channel dude.

That site is complete shit and is doing nothing for you but fooling you into believing lies.

Did you read the article? Note the facts? Note the sourcing? ( hint: none of it was Alex Jones.)

There are no real facts. And no the article wasn't sourcing Jones I know that. I didn't say it did source him in that article. But it promotes him and others like him all over their site. The facts and sources are also SHIT.

No legit site puts out the crap that they do. None.

Fake news? You just linked it.

Like I said. Change the channel.
 

coconut

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coconut
  • Thread Starter Thread Starter
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Makes sense to me. Ask NOAA.

https://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/coral_bleach.html

National Ocean Service
National Oceanic and Atmospheric AdministrationU.S. Department of Commerce
What is coral bleaching?
When corals are stressed by changes in conditions such as temperature, light, or nutrients, they expel the symbiotic algae living in their tissues, causing them to turn completely white.



Can coral survive a bleaching event? If the stress-caused bleaching is not severe, coral have been known to recover. If the algae loss is prolonged and the stress continues, coral eventually dies. Download this infographic: In English | In Spanish


Warmer water temperatures can result in coral bleaching. When water is too warm, corals will expel the algae (zooxanthellae) living in their tissues causing the coral to turn completely white. This is called coral bleaching. When a coral bleaches, it is not dead. Corals can survive a bleaching event, but they are under more stress and are subject to mortality.

In 2005, the U.S. lost half of its coral reefs in the Caribbean in one year due to a massive bleaching event. The warm waters centered around the northern Antilles near the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico expanded southward. Comparison of satellite data from the previous 20 years confirmed that thermal stress from the 2005 event was greater than the previous 20 years combined.

Not all bleaching events are due to warm water.

In January 2010, cold water temperatures in the Florida Keys caused a coral bleaching event that resulted in some coral death. Water temperatures dropped 12.06 degrees Fahrenheit lower than the typical temperatures observed at this time of year. Researchers will evaluate if this cold-stress event will make corals more susceptible to disease in the same way that warmer waters impact corals.
 

Farr Be It

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@Farr Be It you can call "fake news" all you want. This issue isn't conceded. You are flat out WRONG.

You just provided a link to a website that supports Alex Jones who has been a huge source of "fake news" and now that he is getting his fat ass sued for it he is recanting. Chbildren were killed all over the US and he called it a lie and said that it was staged. And your "source" supports him.

That source is crap. Complete and total crap.

A crap source is a crap source. And calling that out isn't an attack, it's just a fact. This is just you saying you don't like to hear the real truth about a really disgusting website because you like it. Maybe you are a member. I don't know.

Look at their homepage. It a total shitshow and rife with bullcrap. Really, really serious bullcrap.

I think it's funny that the people who always say "fake news" don't actually have any grounded sources of news.

http://www.newsofinterest.tv/index.php

Do you actually think any of this is true? These are headlines and bylines from that "source" that I called garbage. This is on their home page. And there is lots of other stuff.

"Trump often makes Illuminati hand signals"

"Be frightened of working mother candidates"

"The United States has secretly been importing millions of Islamic immigrants from overseas for decades".

"A history of the use of Eugenics by the Ruling Elite"

And it has articles that blame 9/11 on the "Global Elite".

Change the channel dude.

That site is complete crap and is doing nothing for you but fooling you into believing lies.



There are no real facts. And no the article wasn't sourcing Jones I know that. I didn't say it did source him in that article. But it promotes him and others like him all over their site. The facts and sources are also crap.

No legit site puts out the crap that they do. None.

Fake news? You just linked it.

Like I said. Change the channel.

:LOL: Les, why are you so obsessed with Alex Jones? As for that site, I’ve never seen it before, but they had some good information on this coral subject matter. Do we want to list all of the whacked stories Huffpost or Media Matters carries?

This thread is about coral. The point is: bleaching is a natural process imbedded in coral as a protective mechanism for changing temperature conditions. Warm and cold.

Recently, it was an El Niño pattern that set the coral into “shock” and has since recovered pretty well. Naturally, as God intended.
Makes sense to me. Ask NOAA.

https://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/coral_bleach.html

National Ocean Service
National Oceanic and Atmospheric AdministrationU.S. Department of Commerce
What is coral bleaching?
When corals are stressed by changes in conditions such as temperature, light, or nutrients, they expel the symbiotic algae living in their tissues, causing them to turn completely white.



Can coral survive a bleaching event? If the stress-caused bleaching is not severe, coral have been known to recover. If the algae loss is prolonged and the stress continues, coral eventually dies. Download this infographic: In English | In Spanish


Warmer water temperatures can result in coral bleaching. When water is too warm, corals will expel the algae (zooxanthellae) living in their tissues causing the coral to turn completely white. This is called coral bleaching. When a coral bleaches, it is not dead. Corals can survive a bleaching event, but they are under more stress and are subject to mortality.

In 2005, the U.S. lost half of its coral reefs in the Caribbean in one year due to a massive bleaching event. The warm waters centered around the northern Antilles near the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico expanded southward. Comparison of satellite data from the previous 20 years confirmed that thermal stress from the 2005 event was greater than the previous 20 years combined.

Not all bleaching events are due to warm water.

In January 2010, cold water temperatures in the Florida Keys caused a coral bleaching event that resulted in some coral death. Water temperatures dropped 12.06 degrees Fahrenheit lower than the typical temperatures observed at this time of year. Researchers will evaluate if this cold-stress event will make corals more susceptible to disease in the same way that warmer waters impact corals.
(y)
 

Dieter the Brock

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8,196
Here is my ROD conspiracy theory
Farr Be It and Coconut are the same person

Post borderline political bullshit as Coconut on a site where it’s verboten - you know, posts about teacher’s unions and global warming - then reply as Farr Be It and steer the thread straight into Nazi right wing bullshit garbage heep
 

coconut

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  • Thread Starter Thread Starter
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Here is my ROD conspiracy theory
Farr Be It and Coconut are the same person

Post borderline political bullcrap as Coconut on a site where it’s verboten - you know, posts about teacher’s unions and global warming - then reply as Farr Be It and steer the thread straight into Nazi right wing bullcrap garbage heep
I posted about Biorock because I enjoy snorkeling. By your logic saying it is hot today is borderline political crap.

The teachers union position is simply bizarre. Not sure how you see that as borderline political.

Both topics I found on or through visiting DrudgeReport.com one of the most visited sites on the internet.

I only post as coconut.
 

Farr Be It

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Here is my ROD conspiracy theory
Farr Be It and Coconut are the same person

Post borderline political bullcrap as Coconut on a site where it’s verboten - you know, posts about teacher’s unions and global warming - then reply as Farr Be It and steer the thread straight into Nazi right wing bullcrap garbage heep

What the hell is wrong with you?!!

Maybe you can go back at look at who made this political, and apologize to coconut AND.me.

I noted a SCIENCE article for science purposes. LES went all batsh!t political. I probably did make one mistake: engaging with Les.

Both of you have been pretty rude and assumptive. Not cool.
 

Dieter the Brock

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Joined
May 18, 2014
Messages
8,196
What the hell is wrong with you?!!

Maybe you can go back at look at who made this political, and apologize to coconut AND.me.

I noted a SCIENCE article for science purposes. LES went all batsh!t political. I probably did make one mistake: engaging with Les.

Both of you have been pretty rude and assumptive. Not cool.

Snowflake
 

Dieter the Brock

Fourth responder
Joined
May 18, 2014
Messages
8,196
I posted about Biorock because I enjoy snorkeling. By your logic saying it is hot today is borderline political crap.

The teachers union position is simply bizarre. Not sure how you see that as borderline political.

Both topics I found on or through visiting DrudgeReport.com one of the most visited sites on the internet.

I only post as coconut.

Dude i see you working
 

Farr Be It

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Snowflake

Dude i see you working

I’M the snowflake? Ironic, tool.

When did you become so sensitive?

I just ain’t gonna stand for your bull crap “conspiracy theory”.

I can discuss anything on this board politely, within the rules of our forum. I thought the science of this was interesting and posted an alternative view of what was happening with the coral reefs.

Ironically, @coconut ’s original article and what I posted did not even agree with each other. But we were able to be civil.

It was only when @LesBaker came in braying about politics that it got ugly. Interesting that you jumped in not seeing that.

Kind of a blind spot you are showing.

Too bad we can’t just discuss other stuff in the OFF TOPIC, even sometimes disagree, without going all....well, Snowflake.

Not buying your false moral high ground narrative.
 

Corbin

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View: https://youtu.be/WyGq6cjcc3Q


Lol Alex Jones is a complete tool.

He’s WWE for conspiracy nut jobs.

He just gives a shit about selling his products and making money. Watch the clip.