The ultimate goal is to win protection from anchor damage caused by
passing tankers en route to oil terminals on nearby
St. Eustatius
Saba has maritime jurisdiction within 12 km, but the Bank is 60 km
across. Dutch MINA is seeking a Particularly Sensitive Sea Area (PSSA)
designation to regulate international shipping over the parts of the
Saba Bank that lie outside the territorial waters of Saba but in the
Exclusive Economic Zone of the Netherlands Antilles. Intensive documentation is required to put the PSSA application before
the International Maritime Organization, including biological
inventories of common and conspicuous benthic megafauna like fishes,
algae, crabs, and corals.
HRI Doctoral Fellow Peter Etnoyer has been involved in the project
since 2006 through project partner Conservation International. “It’s
great to do research which will protect the environment; this type
of anchor damage is probably occurring worldwide,” he said. Before this trip
he joined scientists from Smithsonian National Museum of Natural
History as they collected at least five new species of sargassum
algae and one new species of fish.
In October, HRI researchers collected two new species of
gorgonians (soft corals) and tripled the known diversity records for shallow
soft corals. The crustacean collections and the species list are
entirely novel; many species of crustaceans (crabs and shrimp) common to the Caribbean
were collected, as well as cryptic species that are often
overlooked. This was also the first expedition to sample below diver
depth on Saba Bank. Deepwater traps were used to collect species in
waters up to 400 meters deep.
In a way, the door is just beginning to open on this project. “The
conservation of biodiversity and its wise use are always difficult
to achieve. Saba Bank is no exception to this rule,” says project
leader Paul Hoetjes of MINA. Three separate presentations related to
the Saba Bank biodiversity assessment were submitted to the 11th
International Coral Reef Symposium (ICRS) this July in Fort
Lauderdale, Florida.
This is the International Year of the Reef 2008, and the ICRS venue
will provide a great opportunity to raise awareness about the anchor
damage issue, to present the results of the HRI biological
inventory, and together with many partners, to help “save” Saba
Bank.
Online Media Coverage:
• Science Daily
• University of Miami
• Dutch MINA