000 nam a22 7a 4500
999 _c9784
_d9784
003 OSt
005 20190202085853.0
008 181214b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _cNARA
100 _917997
_aRajasooriya, Arjan
245 _aReef Check' 99: A new Threat to the Pigeon Islands Corals?
260 _aSri Lanka,
300 _a18-22p.
440 _918042
_aReef Check' 99
505 _aThe famed corals of the Pigeon Islands, off the beach at Nilaveli 20 km north of Trincomalee, were almost completely destroyed by the crown of thorns starfish (Acanthaster planci) in the mid-nineteen seventies. These two small islands and their satellite rocky islets, just 500 nr off shore, were a snorkeller's paradise until hundreds of the voracious, coral-polyp feeding starfish laid waste to its abundant corals. Now largely reestablished, it is once more an easily accessible coral reef w ith a varied assortment of fish and invertebrates— including several not generally seen on the west coast. This reef was chosen by NARA for Reef Check '9S (see box). We found that it was entirely unaffected by the El Nino ocean-warming phenomenon, which had resulted in large extents of corals of the northwest and south coasts, as well as at Kalmunai on the east coast, bleaching and subsequently dying. The Pigeon Islands were chosen as the site for Reef Check '99 by SLSAC. which organised it this time under the superv ision and participation of Arjan Rajasuriya front NARA. w ho serves as country coordinator for the Reef Check programme in Sri Lanka.
942 _cRP
_2ddc