With four luxury
resorts in Maldives -
Anantara Kihavah Villas,
Anantara Dhigu Maldives Resort,
Anantara Veli Maldives Resort and
Naladhu Maldives - guests can
take their pick from some of the best locations and experiences in
the Indian Ocean, including getting up close and personal with the
local marine life and vibrant coral reefs, snorkelling with manta
rays in an UNESCO World Biosphere Reserve, free diving with whale
sharks or cruising the house reef 18 metres below the surface,
just a few strokes out from the shoreline.
In line with the philosophy that environmental
responsibility begins at home, the Anantara team in Maldives has
joined forces with marine biologists from Coral Reef CPR -
conservationists, biologists and ecologists whose mission is to
reduce threats and promote sustainable management and
rehabilitation of reef ecosystems - to develop
ways to protect the coral ahead of the anticipated environmental
stresses of El Niño, a climate cycle that has a global impact on
weather patterns.
Led by Chief Scientist, Dr. Andrew Bruckner, the
five-year programme, Holistic Approach to Reef Protection or
‘HARP’, encompasses practical environmental protection and marine
education with the goal of limiting potential damage to the reefs
in Maldives and ensuring the
coral reefs continue to not only survive, but to thrive.
As well
as Anantara taking its responsibility to the local environment
very seriously, the programme will also ensure that guests at each
resort – as well as the local community – can continue to enjoy
the spectacular world beneath the waterline for many years to
come.
Corals in Maldives
Extending across the
expansive Laccadive Sea in the Indian Ocean, Maldives is a
country of atolls; small coral islands encircled by azure lagoons.
Unique to Maldives, luxury resorts are the sole occupants of
each island, providing a truly private and unique experience.
Coral reefs beneath the shimmering waters of Maldives protect
the pristine beaches and guard the crystal-clear lagoons. They
also support an astounding array of tropical fish, crustaceans and
bizarre-looking molluscs. But for all of its beauty and apparent
resilience, coral is a sensitive organism, vulnerable to extreme
weather, sudden environmental changes, the effects of global
climate change, as well as outbreaks of coral predators.
Principal investigator and lead scientist with
Coral Reef CPR, Dr. Andrew Bruckner, said, “Some reefs in Maldives are experiencing unusually high water temperatures which
is causing coral bleaching. These coral animals contain symbiotic
single-celled algae within their tissues, which provide the coral
with up to 90% of its energy. Once stressed, the coral expels
these algae, causing them to turn completely white. If algae loss
is prolonged and the stress continues, corals can die. But it’s
not all doom and gloom, when a coral turns white, it is not dead
and if the stress-caused bleaching is not severe, coral can
recover.”
Director of Conservation for Minor Hotels, John
Roberts, elaborates further, “On their first visit in October 2015
the visiting marine biologists performed a major Crown of Thorns
Starfish removal from the reefs surrounding Anantara resorts in
South Male Atoll. In the process, the scientists helped save a
great reef on Anantara Veli Resort, which is now also proving most
resilient to current bleaching. As part of those efforts last
year, Coral Reef CPR and Anantara have produced a manual to
distribute throughout the country outlining best practice should
there be another Crown of Thorns Starfish outbreak.”
Holistic Approach To Reef Protection (HARP)
Currently all project work undertaken in
Maldives by Coral
Reef CPR for HARP is funded by the Anantara initiative ‘Dollars
For Deeds’, whereby Anantara guests are invited to donate one
dollar for each night of their stay, which is then matched dollar
for dollar by Minor Hotels Group.
Dollars for Deeds funds raised in Maldives are committed over the coming five years to three key
focus areas: protection of marine and coastal environments;
environmental education; and community welfare.
In January
this year, Coral Reef CPR returned to Maldives for the first
of four monitoring phases throughout 2016. Ten monitoring stations
were set up on coral reefs surrounding Anantara resorts in South
Male Atoll and Baa Atoll, with the purpose of evaluating the water
conditions and marine populations before, during and post 2016 El
Niño phenomena.
Already widely reported by international media
across the globe as being the longest El Niño on record, during
Coral Reef CPR’s second visit to Maldives in April this year,
promising results have been extracted from the monitoring
stations, despite some alarming findings.
“Since the
beginning of March, temperatures on the reef have exceeded 30°C
and they remained above 31°C during April, reaching 32 - 33 °C in lagoonal environments,” explained Dr. Andrew Bruckner. “Under
normal conditions, sea water temperatures should be 3-4 degrees
cooler at depth but these high temperatures are extending beyond
35 metres depth. These high water temperatures are due to an
unprecedented El Niño event which is now in its second year.
Simultaneously the sea has been unusually calm which has allowed
excessive levels of UV light radiation to penetrate the reefs.”
“Due to stressful conditions corals in some areas in
Maldives began to pale in colour at the beginning of April and
several sensitive species bleached white. By mid-April between
60-80% of corals on the reef we were monitoring were fully
bleached or a very light yellow in colour. In
certain shallow lagoonal environments bleaching was much more
severe, and sensitive corals were affected. On a positive note, by
the end of April temperatures on Baa Atoll had begun to decline
and there was very little coral mortality on the outer reefs,” he
said.
Super Corals
Through this research some surprising and
exciting revelations have been discovered. Georgia Coward, Project
Manager and Fishery Biologist with Coral Reef CPR said, “Although
the level of bleaching is similar to that reported during previous
El Niño events and is comparable to reports from other countries,
we have observed a number of colonies of each species that have proven resistant to changing conditions, possibly by producing
protective fluorescent pigments. Similarly certain colonies have not bleached at all despite being located adjacent to corals of
the same species that bleached severely. We refer to these as “super corals” and feel that these may have adapted to elevated
sea temperatures. Over the coming months we will be analysing
extracts taken from the super corals and other coral species in
laboratory conditions, as well as looking closely at the fish population reports surrounding them.”
Looking Forward
The
third and fourth phases of the HARP Programme with Anantara
involve creating a coral nursery to assist in the rehabilitation
of degraded and damaged reefs. Through coral mariculture, when the
scientists return in July and October 2016, small branches from the identified super corals will be extracted and propagated. Once
matured, these corals will be transplanted back on to the reef.
During the visits from Coral Reef CPR scientists, guests
at the Anantara resorts in both South Male Atoll and Baa Atoll can
enhance their diving and snorkelling experiences by joining the
marine biologists on their excursions, and participate in
Anantara’s endeavours to keep the reefs healthy and vibrant for
generations to enjoy.
Future visits from Dr. Andrew
Bruckner, Georgia Coward and other Coral Reef CPR scientists are
set for the end of July until mid-August 2016 and October 2016.
Check special rates and
availability at:
Anantara Kihavah Villas,
Anantara Dhigu Maldives Resort,
Anantara Veli Maldives Resort
and
Naladhu Maldives.
See other recent
news regarding:
Anantara,
Coral,
CSR,
Maldives
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