Coral Reef question for National Geo Channel]

Keven Reed kevenreed at earthlink.net
Thu Sep 26 11:19:51 EDT 2002


Dear Kimberly White Erlinger,
    In 1992 the Guinness Book of Records had published the largest,
discrete, stony coral colony (corals in the order Scleractinia) to be
Galaxea fascicularis at Iriomote island in Okinawa, the southern
prefecture of Japan.  Okinawa, Japan is by the way, closer to Taiwan
than Tokyo.
    Knowing this, when I dove on a much larger discrete colony of coral,
Porites lutea, off the north shore of Ie Shima, Okinawa, Japan, I
returned with cameras, measuring line, etc. and my dive partner, Russell
Gilbert,
and sent the documentation into Guinness with the following details:
    At approximately 17 meters depth (55 fsw), 26 degrees 44' N, 127
degrees 46.8 E in Okinawa is a high raised dome pinnacle of one solid
colony of
encrusting Porites lutea.  The colony is undercut so on approach
underwater from the east, swimming west, it appears in profile as a
giant mushroom
as big as a small house.  The colony was photographed with a 20 mm lens
on
a Nikonos III and the circumference of the colony was 31 meters (100
feet)
which definitely exceeded the 59+ feet circumference of Dr. Shirai's
Galaxea at Iriomote.
    I transmitted this information electronically to Dr. "Charlie" Veron
and Dr. Peter Isdale in Australia in 1995, and learned that they had
almost
simultaneously measured and reported to Guinness a Porites coral colony
measuring almost eleven meters in diameter and over 7.5 meters in height
on the GBR.
    So, I'm naturally curious what species of coral the Chinese are
referring to and if its dimensions exceed that of the Porites I reported
in Okinawa or the one the Australians reported from the GBR.??
    Another interesting sidebar about what constitutes a 'discreet'
colony can develop when one notes that some stony corals can use
fragmentation
and asexual cloning as well as sexual reproduction to proliferate.  Is a
'discrete colony' the result of one sexually produced planula (larvum)
settling on the substrate, or do asexual clones count as the same colony
in your definition?  Sincerely, Keven Reed, OD (ISRS member)

Joint Readiness Clinical Advisory Board:  (301) 619-2186
FAX:  (301) 619-2355
1014 Mercer Place
Frederick, MD 21701

----- Original Message -----
To: "coral-list" <coral-list at aoml.noaa.gov>
Sent: Friday, September 20, 2002 4:44 PM
Subject: [Fwd: Coral Reef question for National Geo Channel]

> From:  kerlinge at ngs.org
> To: coral-list
> Subject:  Coral Reef question for National Geo Channel
>
> Hello,
>
> I'm a researcher at the National Geographic Channels International. On
> reviewing
> a script, I found a claim that the "big mushroom" coral off Green Island
> in
> Taiwan is possibly considered the largest and oldest independent coral.
> Is this
> true? Can someone confirm this for me? I haven't been able to confirm
> this via
> the internet.
>
> Thank you very much for your time--
>
> Kimberly White Erlinger
> Researcher, NGCI
~~~~~~~
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