From coral at aoml.noaa.gov Thu Aug 1 08:12:08 1996 From: coral at aoml.noaa.gov (Coral Health and Monitoring Program) Date: Thu, 1 Aug 1996 08:12:08 -0400 (EDT) Subject: Updated Jobs-List Message-ID: There have been several updates to the Employment Listings at the CHAMP Home Page, including a couple of openings in the Florida Keys and a couple of resumes. The URL is: http://coral.aoml.noaa.gov/jobs/jobs.html Hope this helps! Cheers, JCH From aszmant at rsmas.miami.edu Thu Aug 1 16:37:01 1996 From: aszmant at rsmas.miami.edu (Alina Szmant) Date: Thu, 1 Aug 1996 16:37:01 -0400 Subject: coral spawning Message-ID: <199608012037.QAA26047@umigw.miami.edu> I am expecting Acropora palmata (and possibly A. cervicornis) to spawn on one or more nights of August 2 - 4th, from 10 - 11 pm. Diploria strigosa might also spawn this month but probably a few nights later and earlier in the evening (9 - 10 pm). I am not expecting Montastraeas to spawn, but would welcome observations August 4 - 6th, 10 pm -12 am. If anyone observes spawning by any of these species I would greatly appreciate it if you could either notify me (information in my signature) or post it on Coral-List. Types of observations that are important and useful include: percent of population spawning, patterns of within-colony spawning, multiple night observations of individual colonies (whether individual colonies spawn more than once, and if so, is it the same part of the colony each night), detailed description of colony morphology (for species such as A cervicornis and A prolifera: same or different spawning patterns?; also for Montastraeas). Many thanks! Alina Szmant ********************************************** Dr. Alina M. Szmant Coral Reef Research Group RSMAS-MBF University of Miami 4600 Rickenbacker Cswy. Miami FL 33149 TEL: (305)361-4609 FAX: (305)361-4600 or 361-4005 E-mail: ASZMANT at RSMAS.MIAMI.EDU ********************************************** From hendee at aoml.noaa.gov Fri Aug 2 10:00:55 1996 From: hendee at aoml.noaa.gov (James C. Hendee) Date: Fri, 2 Aug 1996 10:00:55 -0400 (EDT) Subject: coral spawning In-Reply-To: <199608012037.QAA26047@umigw.miami.edu> Message-ID: In addition to any mention of spawning information Dr. Szmant has requested, it would be helpful to know any other supporting information you might have such as temperature, salinity, depth, time, sea-state, etc. Many thanks... +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+ | James C. Hendee | Internet: hendee at aoml.noaa.gov| | Coral Health and | | | Monitoring Program | Voice: 305 361-4380 | | Ocean Chemistry Division | Fax: 305 361-4582 | | NOAA/AOML | COASTAL RBBS: 305 361-4524 | | 4301 Rickenbacker Causeway | | | Miami, FL 33149-1026 | http://coral.aoml.noaa.gov | +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+ From mabel at usp.br Sat Aug 3 14:42:27 1996 From: mabel at usp.br (Mabel Augustowski) Date: Sat, 3 Aug 1996 15:42:27 -0300 Subject: Coral Reef Bibliography Message-ID: <199608031842.PAA49388@spider.uspnet.usp.br> Hello, Liz, Your compilation will be very useful to me, please forward it when you finish. I am specially interested in reef research methodologies. Thanks, Mabel. Mabel Augustowski Research Leader Parque Estadual da Ilha Anchieta C.P. 204 - Ubatuba, SP Brasil e-mail: mabel at usp.br From coral at aoml.noaa.gov Mon Aug 5 08:25:27 1996 From: coral at aoml.noaa.gov (Coral Health and Monitoring Program) Date: Mon, 5 Aug 1996 08:25:27 -0400 (EDT) Subject: Bleaching information (fwd) Message-ID: ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Fri, 2 Aug 1996 15:02:03 +0500 (GMT) From: Posg. Biol. arina - Unal/Invemar To: hendee at aoml.noaa.gov Subject: Bleaching information Santa Marta, August 2nd of 1996 Dear Doctor, In the last months of 1995 a coral-bleaching event was detected along the Caribbean region. We have monitored the extension of this phenomenon in the Santa Marta area, and the recovery of some of the affected colonies. We found an interesting relation between the event and the high in situ temperatures. We are interested in obtaining information about this phenomenon in your area in terms of date of the beggining, affected species, percent of coral cover affected, recovery of colonies, and possibly associated factors. Any information will be welcome at this adress: Gabriel R. Navas S. Universidad Nacional de Colombia-INVEMAR Punta de Betin Apartado Aereo 1016 Santa Marta Colombia Sur America Tels: (57)(954)214774 (57)(954)214775 (57)(954)211380 Fax: (57)(954)211377 e-mail: pbiomar at santamarta.cetcol.net.co Best regards, Gabriel R. Navas S. From aszmant at rsmas.miami.edu Mon Aug 5 18:08:34 1996 From: aszmant at rsmas.miami.edu (Alina Szmant) Date: Mon, 5 Aug 1996 18:08:34 -0400 Subject: Acropora spawning Message-ID: <199608052208.SAA26800@umigw.miami.edu> We did observe Acropora palmata spawning the night of Aug. 2nd, with bundle formation from ca. 10 pm to 10:45 pm, and bundle release for ca. 30 after that. The night of Aug. 3rd we some spawning but very minor compared to the nite before. We welcome learning of observations by others, especially whether anyone observed spawning by this species on Aug. 1st. Alina Szmant ********************************************** Dr. Alina M. Szmant Coral Reef Research Group RSMAS-MBF University of Miami 4600 Rickenbacker Cswy. Miami FL 33149 TEL: (305)361-4609 FAX: (305)361-4600 or 361-4005 E-mail: ASZMANT at RSMAS.MIAMI.EDU ********************************************** From coral at aoml.noaa.gov Tue Aug 6 09:17:15 1996 From: coral at aoml.noaa.gov (Coral Health and Monitoring Program) Date: Tue, 6 Aug 1996 09:17:15 -0400 (EDT) Subject: Coral bleaching in Belize Message-ID: Forwarded bleaching information: ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Thu, 01 Aug 96 15:32:20 GMT From: Coral Cay Conservation To: hendee at aoml.noaa.gov Cc: ccc at coralcay.demon.co.uk Subject: Coral bleaching Dear Jim, My colleague Peter Raines has passed on your correspondence regarding coral bleaching and asked me to send you CCC's bleaching records from Belize. Through our baseline survey work we have a number of records of bleaching but the data are rather qualitative. From personal observations I have seen a number of bleached colonies on Turneffe Atoll. However, we did one limited quantitative study which gave the following results from Calabash Cay, Turneffe Atoll: Agaricia lamarcki (3 normal, 9 partially bleached, 0 completely bleached) Meandrina meandrites (30, 6, 7) Siderastrea siderea (36, 0, 0) Stephanocoenia michelenii (7, 0, 0) Agaricia agaricites (1, 0, 2) This survey was done along the top of the escarpment (around 15m) in October 1994. The water temperature was 29.5 deg C (surface) and 29 at 40m. These temperatures are typical for this area. As I am sure you are aware CARICOMP have more detailed information on bleaching in Belize. I hope this information is useful and please do not hesitate to contact me again for further details, Best wishes, Alastair Harborne Science Coordinator. -- Coral Cay Conservation Ltd. 154 Clapham Park Road, London, SW4 7DE, UK. Tel: +44 (0)71 498 6248 Fax: +44 (0)71 498 8447 E-Mail: ccc at coralcay.demon.co.uk WWW: http://www.demon.co.uk/coralcay/home.html From STRI01.NAOS.COLLISOP at ic.si.edu Tue Aug 6 11:36:40 1996 From: STRI01.NAOS.COLLISOP at ic.si.edu (Peter Collison) Date: Tue, 06 Aug 1996 11:36:40 -0400 Subject: Permanent transects.quadrapods Message-ID: Dear All Does anyone out there know anything on the construction of uw camera frames forquantitave quadrat photography? There was an excellent design for a 0.5m2 frame in Coyer and Witman....but I do not have the book. Any info would be excellent Many thanks Peter Collinson From CoralReefA at aol.com Fri Aug 9 20:54:05 1996 From: CoralReefA at aol.com (CoralReefA at aol.com) Date: Fri, 9 Aug 1996 20:54:05 -0400 Subject: IYOR Update Message-ID: <960809205405_596094784@emout12.mail.aol.com> Dear IYOR and Coral List Participants This is an update about the International Year of the Reef (IYOR) It is divided into several categories: 1. Background on IYOR and Frequently Asked Questions 2. Brief description of formal launch of IYOR at the Panama ISRS Symposium 3. Coming Events (by country/region) and Resources 4. Contact addresses for further infromation. As always, we encourage (constructive) comments, revisions etc. Please remember to use the listserver only if you message is of general interest (otherwise send indivdual messages). Thanks for your interest in IYOR. All the best, Sue Wells Robert Ginsburg Vanessa Guest Stephen Colwell NEWS OF THE INTERNATIONAL YEAR OF THE REEF, 1997 For those not familiar with the goals of IYOR, this is a major effort in capacity building for reef management, outreach and education, research on reef degradation and its causes, assessment of reef condition and sustainable reef management. It will provide a global context for national and regional efforts and will promote collaboration between organisations and programmes with common interests, providing an umbrella for a wide variety of reef-related activities in research, education, management, tourism etc. IYOR is not a top-down organisation with a large central office; it is instead a grass-roots effort with emphasis on regional and local initiatives, and is relying on individuals and groups to achieve its aims. Groups are encouraged to establish their own committees and develop initiatives appropriate to their locations. IYOR groups have been formed or are being formed in several parts of the world already (see below). Suggestions for organizing a committee appear in the current issue of Reef Encounter. Updates on IYOR activities will be provided from time to time on relevant List Servers. At this time, IYOR does not have a full-time resource person to answer all inquiries, but our volunteer leaders will do their best to answer questions and provide advice. Most of us will be away for extended periods during August and thus there will be delays in responding. The IYOR Web page is being updated and hotlinks to other relevant Web pages are being created; contact Stephen Colwell for further information (address below). FORMAL ANNOUNCEMENT OF IYOR IN PANAMA IYOR was formally announced at the 8th International Coral Reef Symposium in Panama, at the end of June this year. Almost all of the 1400 participants,from numerous countries, including most of the world's leading reef scientists signed the IYOR Pledge of support for conservation, education and assessments of reef condition. An IYOR booth attracted continuous attention throughout the meeting, and distributed a range of materials. A press event attracted television stations, magazines and newspapers and IYOR received good coverage in Latin America and the Caribbean. Copies of the press release are available from Stephen Colwell. The handsome IYOR logo designed by the Scripps Institute was a big hit with participants as it appeared on buttons and a T-shirt. Organisations wishing to use the logo in connection with IYOR activities should ask for an application form from one of the people listed below. An English leaflet on IYOR has been produced and is being distributed. Further print-runs in other languages, as well as country- and region-specific versions, are being planned. IYOR was designated a sanctioned activity of the International Coral Reef Initiative (ICRI) and assigned responsibility for public awareness of the Initiative's 1997 Program. The all-day IYOR Symposium on rapid assessments of benthos and fishes and various impacts was well received. Some 20 researchers from around the Western Atlantic met during the symposium and enthusiastically endorsed the idea of assessing the condition of reefs remote from centres of population. Information on this inititiative, termed WARRS (Western Atlantic Remote Reef Survey) will be posted on the Coral List Server. Two meetings of those interested in education were well attended and the participants voiced strong support for developing a clearing house with information on all available teaching aids (see below). IYOR-related activities also promoted at Panama included: ReefBase, the global database on coral reefs, now available from ICLARM on CD-Rom together with a comprehensive manual. For information contact John McManus, J.MCMANUS at CGNET.COM The Global Coral Reef Monitoring Network (GCMRN) was launched and is developing plans for a network of monitoring sites worldwide. Information brochure available from Clive Wilkinson: C.Wilkinson at pearl.aims.gov.au A poster map of the world's coral reef and mangroves, prepared by the World Conservation Monitoring Centre, is available in English or Spanish from Alastair Grenfell: a.grenfell at wcmc.org.uk COMING EVENTS: INTERNATIONAL October,1996 Montreal: A special session on IYOR, ICRI and coral reefs is being organized at the World Conservation Congress by IUCN - The World Conservation Union. Further information from Paul Holthus, IUCN Marine Program, e-mail: PFH at HQ.iucn.ch PACIFIC: The Pacific Year of the Reef (PYOR) will be launched on 11 February 1997. It is being led by the South Pacific Regional Environmental Program and to date 17 countries are participating; others are expected to join. The PYOR slogan is "Coral Reefs: Their Health, Our Wealth". National campaign plans are being developed. An artwork competition is being held to design a logo, the deadline for entries being 1 October 1996. Plans are also being made to produce a video for the campaign. Further information from Lucille Overhoff e-mail: lucille at pactok.peg.apc.org The 8th Pacific Science Association's Intercongrress to be held in Fiji July 13-19,1997 will feature a full report on the status of coral reefs in the Pacific and the results of resurveys of reefs after some decades, both of which are central themes ofIYOR Additional papers on IYOR themes are being solicited. For information contact Dr. Charles Birkeland, UOG Marine Laboratory, Mangilao, Guam 36923 birkelan at uog9.uog.edu or Dr. Richard W. Grigg, Department of Oceanography, University of Hawaii at Mana, 1000 Pope Rd. Honolulu, Hawii, 96822 rgrigg at soest.hawaii.edu UNITED STATES A wide variety of projects have been planned by government and non-governmental particpants in IYOR. A recent meeting sponsored by NOAA and the AZA in Washington DC explored common themes for IYOR and allowed networking of many of the interested groups. A summary of that meeting will be made available over the IYOR listserv when it is edited by NOAA. These are a few of the events currently planned. Please describe your own plans on the IYOR listserv so that they can be added to the calendar of events that will be displayed on the IYOR Web Site: www.coral.org/iyor/ September 1996: Hawaii launch: How zoos and aquariums can best participate in IYOR will be discussed at the AZA Annual meeting, sponsored by the Waikiki Aquarium. A preview of the IYOR Coral Reef Photography Exhibition - organized by CORAL - will be presented at the Waikiki Aquarium. November 1996: Press Club - background briefing for science writers. IYOR activities will be highlighted and information on the need for coral reef conservation will be distributed to correspondents from major newspapers, magazines and television stations to prepare them for IYOR; sponsored by NOAA and Baltimore Aquarium January 1997; Inauguration of IYOR with a Gala (plans underway in Miami and San Francisco - other sites encouraged) January 1997: The IYOR them will be included at the DEMA dive show, in Orlando Florida 1996/97: ongoing activities at National Aquarium, Baltimore; information from Chris Andrews e-mail: candrews at clark.net Other Aquariums: a number of aquariums are focusing on coral reef education and conservation during IYOR. Individual aquariums (and zoos) are invited to discuss their plans on the IYOR listserv. Color calendar for 1997 IYORproduced by CORAL (Coral Reef Alliance) is available for immediate distribution; information on availability from Stephen Colwell address below. IYOR Coral Reef Photography Exhibition - a collection of underwater photographs by the world's top underwater photographers - will travel to major zoos and aquariums throughout 1997-98 - organized by CORAL Public Service Announcements - on redio and television are planned throughout 1997 to raise the public awareness about IYOR and coral reefs. IYOR Poster contest for children will be held throughout the United States during IYOR. It will be coordinated by the AZA, The Waikiki Aquarium and other participating zoos and aquariums. UNITED KINGDOM September-November 1997: Natural History Museum/Coral Cay Conservation joint exhibition on coral reefs and children's educational weekend February 1997: UK launch at London Zoo, in conjunction with Sea Life Centres, with David Bellamy 1997: BP/Birdlife International/Fauna and Flora International special award for coral reef expeditions BBC programme on coral reefs as part of forthcoming 'Oceans' series Other activities are being developed by the UK IYOR Committee. Further information (as well as copies of the UK-IYOR newsletter) from Vanessa Guest e-mail 101341.16 at CompuServe.COM and Liz Wood e-mail ewood at mail.globalnet.co.uk WESTERN INDIAN OCEAN: An IYOR-affiliated Program to develop research and conservation initiatives for the Western Indian Ocean is being established in Kenya by Tim McClanahan with support from the Pew Charitable Trust. It will be headquartered in Mombassa under the Cora Reef Conservation Project of The Wildlife Conservation Society and will focus on education-outreach and coordination of activities in the region and research on ways to restore degraded reefs and the effects of multiple anthropogenic impacts. GERMANY October 1996: German Research Foundation meeting on 'Global and Regional Controls on Biogenic Information'; IYOR information will be distributed. Further information from Felix Gunkel e-mail: fgunkel at gwdg.de AUSTRALIA Programs being developed through Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, Australian Marine Conservation Society, and University of Sydney. MEXICO Various activities underway, and plans for establishment of IYOR Mexican Committee. COLOMBIA Plans for establishment of IYOR committee underway. EDUCATION MATERIALS Several initiatives are underway to assemble information on existing materials and to produce new education and outreach materials through Steve Ladd, Coral Forest and the UK IYOR Committee. This information will be made available through one of the Listservers shortly, and will also be distributed at the World Conservation Congress.. SCIENTIFIC ACTIVITIES Re-survey of reefs previously impacted by excess sediment -El Nido/Bacuit Bay, Philippines; September, 1996 led by Gregor Hodgson. Initial assessments of coral community condition, Bahamas Barrier Reef (Andros Island); July-August, 1996 led by William Kiene. Re-survey of coral community condition off Abaco Island, Bahamas studied some 30 years ago; September 1996; Robert Ginsburg and RSMAS colleagues A Workshop on research and conservation of coral reefs in the Western Indian Ocean will be held in late February, 1997 in Mombassa, Kenya. Futher information from Tim McClanahan, Coral Reef Conservation Project, The Wildlife Conservation Society, P.O. Box 99470, Mombassa, Kenya FAX: 254 (11) 472215. Further information about IYOR from: Robert N. Ginsburg, Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, University of Miami, 4600 Rickenbacker Causeway, Miami FL 33149; Phone: (305) 361-4875; FAX: (305) 361-4094 or 4632; rginsburg at rsmas.miami.edu Stephen Colwell, CORAL, 809 Delaware St, Berkeley CA 94710, Phone 510-528-2492, Fax 510-528-9317; e-mail: IYOR1997 at aol.com Vanessa Guest, IYOR-UK, Fax (44) 1326-316-836; e-mail: 101341.16 at compuserve.com From pcis at igc.apc.org Sat Aug 10 12:07:40 1996 From: pcis at igc.apc.org (GreenLife Society) Date: Sat, 10 Aug 1996 09:07:40 -0700 (PDT) Subject: IYOR Update Message-ID: <2.2.16.19960811090725.7d8f3216@pop.igc.org> IYOR looks like it's going to be a fantastic program, avoiding the do-nothing approach of some past "year of" campaigns, which has engendered cynicism about the efficacy of such campaigns in the past few years. However, distressfully absent so far are any outreach efforts in the Middle East, the site of some of the most important coral reef ecosystems from the perspective of biodiversity and degree of threat. Hopefully, cooperation between IYOR participants and NGOs/governments/academic institutions in the region will be developed pursuant to the campaign. At 08:54 PM 8/9/96 -0400, CoralReefA at aol.com wrote: >Dear IYOR and Coral List Participants > >This is an update about the International Year of the Reef (IYOR) >It is divided into several categories: >1. Background on IYOR and Frequently Asked Questions >2. Brief description of formal launch of IYOR at the Panama ISRS Symposium >3. Coming Events (by country/region) and Resources >4. Contact addresses for further infromation. >As always, we encourage (constructive) comments, revisions etc. Please >remember to use the listserver only if you message is of general interest >(otherwise send indivdual messages). >Thanks for your interest in IYOR. >All the best, >Sue Wells >Robert Ginsburg >Vanessa Guest >Stephen Colwell > > NEWS OF THE INTERNATIONAL YEAR OF THE REEF, 1997 > >For those not familiar with the goals of IYOR, this is a major effort in >capacity building for reef management, outreach and education, research on >reef degradation and its causes, assessment of reef condition and >sustainable reef management. It will provide a global context for national >and regional efforts and will promote collaboration between organisations >and programmes with common interests, providing an umbrella for a wide >variety of reef-related activities in research, education, management, >tourism etc. > >IYOR is not a top-down organisation with a large central office; it is >instead a grass-roots effort with emphasis on regional and local >initiatives, and >is relying on individuals and groups to achieve its aims. Groups are >encouraged to establish their own committees and develop initiatives >appropriate to their locations. IYOR groups have been formed or are being >formed in several parts of the world already (see below). Suggestions for >organizing a committee appear in the current issue of Reef Encounter. > >Updates on IYOR activities will be provided from time to time on relevant >List Servers. At this time, IYOR does not have a full-time resource person >to answer all inquiries, but our volunteer leaders will do their best to >answer questions and provide advice. Most of us will be away for extended >periods during August and thus there will be delays in responding. The >IYOR Web page is being updated and hotlinks to other relevant Web pages are >being created; contact Stephen Colwell for further information (address >below). > > FORMAL ANNOUNCEMENT OF IYOR IN PANAMA > >IYOR was formally announced at the 8th International Coral Reef Symposium >in Panama, at the end of June this year. Almost all of the 1400 >participants,from numerous countries, including most of the world's leading >reef scientists signed the IYOR Pledge of support for conservation, >education and assessments of reef condition. > >An IYOR booth attracted continuous attention throughout the meeting, and >distributed a range of materials. A press event attracted television >stations, magazines and newspapers and IYOR received good coverage in Latin >America and the Caribbean. Copies of the press release are available from >Stephen Colwell. The handsome IYOR logo designed by the Scripps Institute >was a big hit with participants as it appeared on buttons and a T-shirt. >Organisations wishing to use the logo in connection with IYOR activities >should ask for an application form from one of the people listed below. An >English leaflet on IYOR has been produced and is being distributed. Further >print-runs in other languages, as well as country- and region-specific >versions, are being planned. > >IYOR was designated a sanctioned activity of the International Coral Reef >Initiative (ICRI) and assigned responsibility for public awareness of the >Initiative's 1997 Program. > >The all-day IYOR Symposium on rapid assessments of benthos and fishes and >various impacts was well received. Some 20 researchers from around the >Western Atlantic met during the symposium and enthusiastically endorsed the >idea of assessing the condition of reefs remote from centres of population. > Information on this inititiative, termed WARRS (Western Atlantic Remote >Reef Survey) will be >posted on the Coral List Server. > >Two meetings of those interested in education were well attended and the >participants voiced strong support for developing a clearing house with >information on all available teaching aids (see below). > >IYOR-related activities also promoted at Panama included: > >ReefBase, the global database on coral reefs, now available from ICLARM on >CD-Rom together with a comprehensive manual. For information contact John >McManus, J.MCMANUS at CGNET.COM > >The Global Coral Reef Monitoring Network (GCMRN) was launched and is >developing plans for a network of monitoring sites worldwide. Information >brochure available from Clive Wilkinson: C.Wilkinson at pearl.aims.gov.au > >A poster map of the world's coral reef and mangroves, prepared by the World >Conservation Monitoring Centre, is available in English or Spanish from >Alastair Grenfell: a.grenfell at wcmc.org.uk > > COMING EVENTS: > >INTERNATIONAL > >October,1996 Montreal: A special session on IYOR, ICRI and coral reefs is >being organized at the World Conservation Congress by IUCN - The World >Conservation Union. Further information from Paul Holthus, IUCN Marine >Program, e-mail: PFH at HQ.iucn.ch > >PACIFIC: > >The Pacific Year of the Reef (PYOR) will be launched on 11 February 1997. >It is being led by the South Pacific Regional Environmental Program and to >date 17 countries are participating; others are expected to join. The PYOR >slogan is "Coral Reefs: Their Health, Our Wealth". National campaign plans >are being developed. An artwork competition is being held to design a >logo, the deadline for entries being 1 October 1996. Plans are also being >made to produce a video for the campaign. Further information from Lucille >Overhoff e-mail: >lucille at pactok.peg.apc.org > >The 8th Pacific Science Association's Intercongrress to be held in Fiji >July 13-19,1997 will feature a full report on the status of coral reefs in >the Pacific and the results of resurveys of reefs after some decades, both >of which are central themes ofIYOR Additional papers on IYOR themes are >being solicited. For information contact Dr. Charles Birkeland, UOG Marine >Laboratory, Mangilao, Guam 36923 birkelan at uog9.uog.edu or Dr. Richard W. >Grigg, Department of Oceanography, University of Hawaii at Mana, 1000 Pope >Rd. Honolulu, Hawii, 96822 rgrigg at soest.hawaii.edu > >UNITED STATES >A wide variety of projects have been planned by government and >non-governmental particpants in IYOR. A recent meeting sponsored by NOAA and >the AZA in Washington DC explored common themes for IYOR and allowed >networking of many of the interested groups. A summary of that meeting will >be made available over the IYOR listserv when it is edited by NOAA. These >are a few of the events currently planned. > >Please describe your own plans on the IYOR listserv so that they can be added >to the calendar of events that will be displayed on the IYOR Web Site: > www.coral.org/iyor/ > >September 1996: Hawaii launch: How zoos and aquariums can best participate in >IYOR will be discussed at the AZA Annual meeting, sponsored by the Waikiki >Aquarium. A preview of the IYOR Coral Reef Photography Exhibition - >organized by CORAL - will be presented at the Waikiki Aquarium. > >November 1996: Press Club - background briefing for science writers. IYOR >activities will be highlighted and information on the need for coral reef >conservation will be distributed to correspondents from major newspapers, >magazines and television stations to prepare them for IYOR; sponsored by NOAA >and Baltimore Aquarium > >January 1997; Inauguration of IYOR with a Gala (plans underway in Miami and >San Francisco - other sites encouraged) > >January 1997: The IYOR them will be included at the DEMA dive show, in >Orlando Florida > >1996/97: ongoing activities at National Aquarium, Baltimore; information >from Chris Andrews e-mail: candrews at clark.net > >Other Aquariums: a number of aquariums are focusing on coral reef education >and conservation during IYOR. Individual aquariums (and zoos) are invited to >discuss their plans on the IYOR listserv. > >Color calendar for 1997 IYORproduced by CORAL (Coral Reef Alliance) is >available for immediate distribution; information on >availability from Stephen Colwell address below. > >IYOR Coral Reef Photography Exhibition - a collection of underwater >photographs by the world's top underwater photographers - will travel to >major zoos and aquariums throughout 1997-98 - organized by CORAL > >Public Service Announcements - on redio and television are planned throughout >1997 to raise the public awareness about IYOR and coral reefs. > >IYOR Poster contest for children will be held throughout the United States >during IYOR. It will be coordinated by the AZA, The Waikiki Aquarium and >other participating zoos and aquariums. > > >UNITED KINGDOM > >September-November 1997: Natural History Museum/Coral Cay Conservation >joint exhibition on coral reefs and children's educational weekend > >February 1997: UK launch at London Zoo, in conjunction with Sea Life >Centres, with David Bellamy > >1997: BP/Birdlife International/Fauna and Flora International special award >for coral reef expeditions > >BBC programme on coral reefs as part of forthcoming 'Oceans' series > >Other activities are being developed by the UK IYOR Committee. Further >information (as well as copies of the UK-IYOR newsletter) from Vanessa >Guest e-mail 101341.16 at CompuServe.COM and Liz Wood e-mail >ewood at mail.globalnet.co.uk > >WESTERN INDIAN OCEAN: > >An IYOR-affiliated Program to develop research and conservation initiatives >for the Western Indian Ocean is being established in Kenya by Tim >McClanahan with support from the Pew Charitable Trust. It will be >headquartered in Mombassa under the Cora Reef Conservation Project of The >Wildlife Conservation Society and will focus on education-outreach and >coordination of activities in the region and research on ways to restore >degraded reefs and the effects of multiple anthropogenic impacts. > >GERMANY > >October 1996: German Research Foundation meeting on 'Global and Regional >Controls on Biogenic Information'; IYOR information will be distributed. >Further information from Felix Gunkel e-mail: fgunkel at gwdg.de > >AUSTRALIA > >Programs being developed through Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, >Australian Marine Conservation Society, and University of Sydney. > >MEXICO > >Various activities underway, and plans for establishment of IYOR Mexican >Committee. > >COLOMBIA > >Plans for establishment of IYOR committee underway. > > EDUCATION MATERIALS > >Several initiatives are underway to assemble information on existing >materials and to produce new education and outreach materials through Steve >Ladd, Coral Forest and the UK IYOR Committee. This information will be made >available through one of the Listservers shortly, and will also be >distributed at the World Conservation Congress.. > > SCIENTIFIC ACTIVITIES > >Re-survey of reefs previously impacted by excess sediment -El Nido/Bacuit >Bay, Philippines; September, 1996 led by Gregor Hodgson. > >Initial assessments of coral community condition, Bahamas Barrier Reef >(Andros Island); July-August, 1996 led by William Kiene. > >Re-survey of coral community condition off Abaco Island, Bahamas studied >some 30 years ago; September 1996; Robert Ginsburg and RSMAS colleagues > >A Workshop on research and conservation of coral reefs in the Western >Indian Ocean will be held in late February, 1997 in Mombassa, Kenya. Futher >information from Tim McClanahan, Coral Reef Conservation Project, The >Wildlife Conservation Society, P.O. Box 99470, Mombassa, Kenya FAX: 254 >(11) 472215. > >Further information about IYOR from: > >Robert N. Ginsburg, Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, >University of Miami, 4600 Rickenbacker Causeway, Miami FL 33149; Phone: >(305) 361-4875; FAX: (305) 361-4094 or 4632; >rginsburg at rsmas.miami.edu > >Stephen Colwell, CORAL, 809 Delaware St, Berkeley CA 94710, Phone >510-528-2492, Fax 510-528-9317; e-mail: IYOR1997 at aol.com > >Vanessa Guest, IYOR-UK, Fax (44) 1326-316-836; e-mail: >101341.16 at compuserve.com > > > William C. Burns Director, GreenLife Society - North American Chapter 700 Cragmont Ave. Berkeley, CA 94708 USA Phone/Fax: (510) 558-0620 WWW site: http://EELINK.umich.edu/greenlife/index.html GLSNA Affiliations: Union of Concerned Scientists, Sound Science Initiative The EarthAction Network The Galapagos Coalition Reseau International d'ONG sur la Desertification (RIOD) Accredited NGO Observer, International Whaling Commission European Social Science Fisheries Network -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- "The great use of life is to spend it for something that will outlast it." -- William James -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- From coral at aoml.noaa.gov Sun Aug 11 11:11:11 1996 From: coral at aoml.noaa.gov (Coral Health and Monitoring Program) Date: Sun, 11 Aug 1996 11:11:11 -0400 (EDT) Subject: IYOR & Coral List Update Correction Message-ID: ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: 10 Aug 96 23:43:08 EDT From: John Rewald <100353.164 at compuserve.com> To: Coral Reef Owner Cc: Lucille Apis-Overhoff Subject: IYOR & Coral List Update Concerning the IYOR update posted on Friday, 9 August 1996. Coming Events for the Pacific Region. The regional campaign is called "1997 Pacific Year of the Coral Reef" (PYOCR), all participants agreed on the coral reef theme. The campaign slogan is "Coral Reefs: Their Health, Our Future!" the Our Wealth is a mistake and circulars have been sent out from SPREP rectifying this. John Rewald Head of Department Motupore Island Research Department University of Papua New Guinea Box 320 University P.O. National Capital District Papua New Guinea 134 Phone: (675) 3258093 Fax: (675) 3258093 Telex: NE22366 Email: 100353.164 at compuserve.com jrewald at peg.apc.org From mattia at cbl.cees.edu Wed Aug 14 21:50:33 1996 From: mattia at cbl.cees.edu (Christopher M. Mattia) Date: Wed, 14 Aug 1996 21:50:33 -0400 (EDT) Subject: Non-Destructive Coral Health Monitoring Home Page Message-ID: As part of my Senior Thesis at St. Mary's College of Maryland I have created a page on the WWW. Please take a look at it and send me your comments and suggestions. The Non-destructive Coral Health Monitoring Home Page http://www.cbl.cees.edu/~mattia/SMProject/ as with all web pages some parts are still under construction so watch out for falling bricks...:) Christopher M. Mattia CBL-CEES-UMD P.O. Box 38 Solomons MD 20688 Phone (410) 326-7345 Fax (410) 326-7419 mattia at cbl.cees.edu http://www.cbl.cees.edu/~mattia/ From edrew at ozemail.com.au Fri Aug 16 03:43:16 1996 From: edrew at ozemail.com.au (edrew at ozemail.com.au) Date: Fri, 16 Aug 1996 17:43:16 +1000 (EST) Subject: another new web site Message-ID: <199608160743.RAA23659@oznet02.ozemail.com.au> Those of you addicted to the World Wide Web might like to check out the new web site I am putting together. It has progressed beyond the foundations and you can now get an idea of its eventual splendour. The emphasis is very much marine botany, but, as those who know me could have guessed, Halimeda and the Great Barrier Reef feature extensively. The URL is http://www.ozemail.com.au/~edrew Inevitably, it looks and works best with Netscape 2.0 or above, particularly as JavaScript already features in one interactive page and there is an animated GIF on another. Feedback about potential content will be welcome, but no complaining about some of the pages being empty at present! All will be revealed in the fullness of time........ Ed ------------------------- Dr Edward A Drew ----------------------- | PO Box 361, Castletown, Hyde Park, Townsville, Q 4812, Australia | | TEL +61-077-724452 FAX +61-077-213538 MOBILE +61-014-879869 | | EMAIL edrew at ozemail.com.au WWW http://www.ozemail.com.au/~edrew | ------------------------------------------------------------------ From oveh at bio.usyd.edu.au Fri Aug 16 03:57:30 1996 From: oveh at bio.usyd.edu.au (Ove Hoegh-Guldberg) Date: Fri, 16 Aug 1996 17:57:30 +1000 Subject: Invest in art for coral reefs! Message-ID: <1.5.4.32.19960816075730.006f8b80@mail.bio.usyd.edu.au> Visit the "save the reef" Internet Art Auction! As an event leading up to the "International Year of the Reef" (1997), the Coral Reef Research Institute (CRRI) is running an Internet art auction. This event begins August 15th and runs for two weeks at http://artauction.aust.com. At this site you can visit a gallery of over 50 works of art by internationally acclaimed artists. A novel program allows you to bid for art at the site. The aim of this art auction is to bring awareness of the challenges that face coral reefs world-wide. It will also function to pursue crucial support for One Tree Island research station which is currently being threatened with closure by reduced institutional funding. The loss of One Tree Island (the site of projects like ENCORE) would be a huge blow to coral reef research and conservation. Log in and make an investment in art and the future of coral reefs worldwide! Please disseminate this message electronically to all your email and Internet contacts. An attractive button is attached for putting up at WWW sites. Where: http://artauction.aust.com. When: August 15th to 30th, 1996 Who: Coral Reef Research Institute (research and conservation) SUPPORT THE ART AUCTION! : http://www.artauction.aust.com Aug 15th - 30th. Log in and bid!!! ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Ove Hoegh-Guldberg Ph: (02) 351-2389 School of Biological Sciences Fax: (02) 351-4119 Building A08 Mobile: 014 811 935 University of Sydney Country code Australia = 61 2006 NSW Australia OHG: http://www.bio.usyd.edu.au/SOBS/ACADEMIC/ACASTAFF/ohg/ohg.html Coral Reef Research Institute: http://www.bio.usyd.edu.au/CRRI/crri-ind.html One Tree Island Research Station: http://www.bio.usyd.edu.au/OTI/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------- From coral at aoml.noaa.gov Tue Aug 20 10:56:19 1996 From: coral at aoml.noaa.gov (Coral Health and Monitoring Program) Date: Tue, 20 Aug 1996 10:56:19 -0400 (EDT) Subject: FIO-enhanced C-MAN data Message-ID: An update to Florida Institute of Oceanography (FIO) enhanced Coastal-Marine Automated Network (C-MAN) data from C-MAN stations in the Florida Straits has been made available on the CHAMP Home Page, specifically at: http://coral.aoml.noaa.gov/cman/cman_menu.html Data are available through June, 1996, and include measurements for salinity and photosynthetically active radiation. Header files for these data are the same as for previous years. Near real-time data are available at the same site, although some of the NDBC and/or FIO instruments are in the process of being replaced or repaired. NDBC data (only) may be retrieved from their Home Page at: http://seaboard.ndbc.noaa.gov/ndbc.html For further information, contact Chris Humphrey, who maintains the FIO-enhanced C-MAN sites. He may be reached at (305) 664-9101. His e-mail address is humphrj1 at firnvx.firn.edu. From mattia at cbl.cees.edu Wed Aug 21 09:23:41 1996 From: mattia at cbl.cees.edu (Christopher M. Mattia) Date: Wed, 21 Aug 1996 09:23:41 -0400 (EDT) Subject: Coral Health Monitoring Method Message-ID: For those of you who are actively involved with coral health monitoring. I am interested in finding out by what method are you attempting to assess coral health? One example would be: by using video transects we determine percent cover, and species diversity while monitoring pH, salinity, temperature...etc... The results from this query will be posted on the Non-Destructive Coral Health Monitoring Home Page http://www.cbl.cees.edu/~mattia/SMProject/ Thanks, chris Christopher M. Mattia CBL-CEES-UMD P.O. Box 38 Solomons MD 20688 Phone (410) 326-7345 Fax (410) 326-7419 mattia at cbl.cees.edu http://www.cbl.cees.edu/~mattia/ Non-Destructive Coral Health Monitoring Home Page: http://www.cbl.cees.edu/~mattia/SMProject/ From coral at aoml.noaa.gov Wed Aug 21 19:15:01 1996 From: coral at aoml.noaa.gov (Coral Health and Monitoring Program) Date: Wed, 21 Aug 1996 19:15:01 -0400 (EDT) Subject: Coral Spawning/Gulf of Mexico (fwd) Message-ID: ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: 21 Aug 1996 16:32:25 -0400 From: "Deslarzes, Ken" To: Coral Health and Monitoring Program Subject: Coral Spawning/Gulf of Mexico From: Gregory S. Boland, Dept. of Oceanography, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843, USA. Ph. 409-845-8387 -Copy of a Press Release- Seven evenings after the full moon of July; Flower Gardens Banks National Marine Sanctuary (NW Gulf of Mexico), August 6, 1996. The corals continue to surprise all the coral reef biologists, including this one after five years of observation and research. I would have bet, along with virtually every one else, that the odds were very small of seeing any spawning at the Flower Gardens this early in August, but the Flower Gardens surprised us yet again. On the night of August 6th, seven evenings after the full moon of July 30, the Flower Gardens impressed a large number of volunteer research divers from Oceanographic Expeditions with a mass spawning event (albeit very reduced in comparison to previous year's events). In comparison to other sites throughout the Atlantic and Caribbean during normal events, even a reduced mass spawning at the Flower Gardens appears quite spectacular. The first witnessed coral spawning occurred at 20:55 hrs CDT from both male and female Montastraea cavernosa. One dive team also recorded a mass egg bundle release from a single Diploria strigosa head at 21:30 hrs. This author entered the water at 21:45 and shortly after came across the head of a female M. cavernosa releasing rather loose aggregations of tiny eggs. In previous years, this diecious species extruded much more agglutinated egg masses than what was seen this year in August. Individual eggs rapidly separated from each other as they were expelled from each polyp. A total of three different species were seen spawning between a narrow time window of 20:55-22:20 hrs. These included D. strigosa, Montastraea franksi and both sexes of M. cavernosa. People on the vessel also reported a limited presence of a spawn slick on the water's surface roughly during the same period. Ten divers entered the water for a third dive sequence on the evening of August at 23:55 hrs. None observed any evidence of spawning during their dive of approximately 35 minutes and no other coral eggs were observed on the surface for the rest of the evening up to at least 02:00 hrs of 7 August. The second night of the cruise did not result in any diver observations of spawning between the hours of 20:30-21:30 hrs but there were observations of coral egg bundles on the surface. The species producing the egg bundles was not positively identified but appeared to be from a M. franksi. Several heads of D. strigosa were observed and photographed by this author underwater in pre-spawning "setting stage". The vast majority (>95%) of the other D. strigosa heads did not show any signs of a setting stage. A very brief appearance of egg bundles also appeared on the surface at 21:30 hrs during the night of 8 August, 9 evenings after the full moon. This is the time frame for the spawning of Colpophyllia natans, but the observed egg bundles were much smaller that the normal baby pea-sized C. natans egg bundles. The observed bundles could have been from a single head due to the very short duration (2-3 min) the spawn drifted past the vessel. There is little doubt that the 3 or 4 September coral spawning event will be quite spectacular, but then, we have been fooled before. From mbs at mangga.usc.edu.ph Fri Aug 23 06:31:31 1996 From: mbs at mangga.usc.edu.ph (Marine Biology Section, USC, Cebu, Philippi) Date: Fri, 23 Aug 1996 10:31:31 +0000 Subject: water seepage Message-ID: <1AA1C60558@mangga.usc.edu.ph> Dear everyone, Hi! I am planning to conduct a study on how a reef community structure is modified by ambient nutrient levels. The study area has high levels of PO4 and NO3 and I have good reason to think that inputs are from the adjacent resort. In-puts possibly come from water used to spray on lawns and mini-golf courses, which seeps through the ground, is nutrient-loaded, and finds its way into the immediate coastal area. I would like to know how to go about quantifying this water that ends up in the sea. I have come across studies using "piezometers" and "seepage meters"-- how do these work? Are there other ways of quantifying seepage? In addition, if anybody of you is working on a study related to mine, reprints will be more than welcome. Thank you very much and have a nice day! cheers, Chona ____sender's name_____ Marine Biology Section University of San Carlos fax (+63-32) 3460351 Cebu City 6000, Philippines email: mbs at mangga.usc.edu.ph ****** When replying, PLEASE INCLUDE ADDRESSEE'S NAME IN SUBJECT HEADER *** thanks. ******** From Sharifah.SyedIbrahim at jcu.edu.au Fri Aug 23 05:01:43 1996 From: Sharifah.SyedIbrahim at jcu.edu.au (Sharifah Syed Ibrahim) Date: Fri, 23 Aug 1996 19:01:43 +1000 (EST) Subject: salinity and El Nino Message-ID: Dear all, Hi. I am a student, and new to this list. My project is trying to investigate the effects of hyposalinity on scleractinian and octocorals. 1. I am wondering if anyone has contemplated the El Nino effects as being not just temperature but also, with the change in climate (hurricanes, high rainfall, etc), the likelihood of hyposalinity as a major stress factor. 2 Any leads to recent materials on hyposalinity and corals would be appreciated (the searches I did yielded dated stuff which is useful but not up to date). 3. As well, any one who has worked on HELIOPORA COERULEA in terms of tolerances, requirements in nature, problems in keeping in aquaria, etc? I would greatly appreciate your kind inputs on any one of the above query. Thanking you in advance, nora ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Nora SyedIbrahim Postgraduate student Marine Biology Dept. James Cook University Townsville, Queensland 4811 A U S T R A L I A. Ph: ++61-077- 815718 Fax: ++61-077- 251570 Email: Sharifah.SyedIbrahim at jcu.edu.au From coral at aoml.noaa.gov Fri Aug 23 11:51:44 1996 From: coral at aoml.noaa.gov (Coral Health and Monitoring Program) Date: Fri, 23 Aug 1996 11:51:44 -0400 (EDT) Subject: Marine Biology CD Message-ID: This message from the marbio listserver may be of interest to some of you. Sorry if you've already seen this, we've just installed a new hard drive for the list-server and this may be the 2nd go-round... jch ================================ From: Jeff Levinton Date: Thu, 22 Aug 1996 16:27:35 -0400 (EDT) Subject: marbio: MARINE BIOLOGY EXPLORATIONS CD COMING SEPTEMBER 13 FROM OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS "MARINE BIOLOGY EXPLORATIONS" by Jeffrey Levinton (State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook NY 11794 USA) A CD with nearly 300 images of marine environments and organisms. Produced as a companion to "Marine Biology: Function, Biodiversity, Ecology" by Jeffrey Levinton, Marine Biology Explorations (MBE) gives the student an opportunity to examine images and explanatory text for the following subject areas: (1) The Voyage of the Challenger Expedition (2) Marine Plankton (3) Salt Marshes (4) Mangals (5) Coral Reefs (6) Soft Bottom Shores (7) Rocky Shores (8) Marine Invertebrate Larvae (9) Subtidal Bottoms (10) Hot Vent Environments (11) Kelp Forests Complete Picture Index Images are from both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of North America. Each subject area allows the student to "wander" and encounter new organisms and ecological features. Text boxes describe organisms or illuminate ecological processes. Other features: (1) A multiple choice test module, keyed to chapters of Levinton's book. Over 250 questions are provided. (2) Digital images of nearly all figures from Levinton's text "Marine Biology: Function, Biodiversity, Ecology." All figures are in Adobe Acrobat format, which allows figures to be converted, for example into classroom presentables, such as overhead transparencies and digitally projectible images (e.g., from a laptop connected to a computer-compatible projector). Hardware Required: Macintosh Computer with CD-ROM, MACOS version 6.0 and above Estimated Cost: $24.95 or comes free to instructor who adopts Levinton's text. To order, contact Oxford University Press at: Order Department, Oxford University Press 2001 Evans Road Cary, North Carolina 27513 tel. 800-451-7556 For inspection copies and further information, please contact Chris Johnson at Oxford University Press. His email address is: cpj at oup-usa.org Jeff Levinton Department of Ecology and Evolution State University of New York Stony Brook NY 11794-5245 tel 516 632 8602 fax 516 632 7626 From hendee at aoml.noaa.gov Mon Aug 26 13:03:38 1996 From: hendee at aoml.noaa.gov (James C. Hendee) Date: Mon, 26 Aug 1996 13:03:38 -0400 (EDT) Subject: reef@aoml maintenance Message-ID: We are currently installing a new hard drive and other items of hardware on the workstation which holds the coral-list listserver software (majordomo), so if you have trouble posting messages, we would appreciate your patience. Usually, if a message doesn't make it across the Internet the first time, the message will automatically be resent at a prespecified interval. Cheers, Jim Hendee coral-list administrator From horta at servidor.dgsca.unam.mx Wed Aug 28 19:54:43 1996 From: horta at servidor.dgsca.unam.mx (Horta Puga Guillermo Javier-ENEPIZ) Date: Wed, 28 Aug 1996 17:54:43 -0600 (CST) Subject: Coral list In-Reply-To: Message-ID: Burro no enviaste completo el mensaje Me parece que la direccion es majordomo at reef.aoml.noaa.gov colocas el siguiente mensaje en el texto: Subcribe coral-list sino checa pues nimodo, ojala alguien mas te conteste. Guillermo On Wed, 28 Aug 1996, Yedid Hilu Aaron-ENEPIZ wrote: > If someone could help me how to suscribe to coral reef list I would > appreciate the h > > From Sue.Flood at bbc.co.uk Thu Aug 29 11:06:49 1996 From: Sue.Flood at bbc.co.uk (Flood,Sue) Date: 29 Aug 96 15:06:49 GMT Subject: Message-ID: <"F3B1253281902C79@bs1.bbc"@-SMF-> Dear All The BBC Natural History Unit is producing a major new documentary series called 'The Blue Planet', 8 x 50-minute programmes about the natural history of the world's oceans, encompassing a breadth and depth (quite literally!) of habitats, e.g coral reefs, rocky shores, mangroves, temperate waters, open ocean, polar seas and the deep. We are keen to find highly visual stories to present in this series and would very much like to hear from you if you have any interesting/unusual/spectacular behaviours and/or locations that you feel would be worthwhile including - from the size of zooxanthellae up to humpbacks at Silver Banks! It would be particularly useful if you were able to include information on any of the following points: 1. Is there any visual material of this story in existence, either in the form of stills or video footage? 2. Is there any good reference material (review articles, books etc.) dealing with the subject, especially those with accompanying photographs? 3. Can you suggest anybody (perhaps yourself?!) whom we could contact regarding the practicalities and feasibility of filming this subject? We hope that with your help we can ensure that 'The Blue Planet' will be a hallmark series of which both the BBC and the scientific community can be proud. Any help that you can give us would be very much appreciated. I'd also be very grateful for information about any forthcoming conferences on anything marine, which may be helpful. Finally, apologies to those of you reading this whom I've already spoken to in Panama! (and many thanks again for your kind help). With many thanks for any help that you can give me, Sincerely Sue Flood Sue Flood BBC Natural History Unit Whiteladies Road Bristol BS8 2LR UK Tel 44-117-9746763 Fax 44-117-9237708 E-mail Sue.Flood at bbc.co.uk From davidson at blue.weeg.uiowa.edu Fri Aug 30 14:44:49 1996 From: davidson at blue.weeg.uiowa.edu (Osha Gray Davidson) Date: Fri, 30 Aug 1996 13:44:49 -0500 Subject: Great Barrier Reef contacts Message-ID: <2.2.32.19960830184449.00687e80@blue.weeg.uiowa.edu> I'm in the process of planning a trip to the Great Barrier Reef, to take place some time in the next few months, for work on a book (for lay-persons) about coral reefs and associated ecosystems. Are there any list-members down under who would be willing to serve as contacts for this trip--explaining their work and suggesting places to visit? I'd greatly appreciate the help! Thanks, in advance, Osha Osha Gray Davidson 14 S. Governor St. Iowa City, IA 52240 USA PH: (319) 338-4778 FAX: (319) 338-8606 e-mail: davidson at blue.weeg.uiowa.edu Center for International and Comparative Studies, University of Iowa From LizMat at aol.com Fri Aug 30 12:04:51 1996 From: LizMat at aol.com (LizMat at aol.com) Date: Fri, 30 Aug 1996 12:04:51 -0400 Subject: Coral reef bibliography - update Message-ID: <960830120450_397662500@emout18.mail.aol.com> Thanks to everyone for sending me lists and lists of coral reef related references. I wanted to provide a brief update of the status of our work. We (GreenLife Society) have decided to focus our bibliography on management and policy related references. There are 2 main reasons for this: first, the shear volume of scientific work that has been and is being done is way beyond our scope; and second, we found several organizations already working on very similar projects. Rather than re-do what has already been done, we have been discussing ways to collaborate and consolidate the information collected. ICLARM has recently completed the first version of ReefBase, a comprehensive CD-ROM database (contact ReefBase at cgnet.com for further information). We will be helping to update their references list by sending all of the bibliographic info that we have received. The Earth Policy Center at Columbia University is also developing a reef-related database that will be accessible through the Internet. Thank you all again for your contributions. Liz Matthews Reseach Associate GreenLife Society Lizmat at aol.com