Could volcanic eruptions in the south-west Pacific save the Great Barrier Reef?
19 July 2012
Could the pumice that surges into the ocean once a volcano erupts in Tonga or elsewhere in the south-west Pacific save the Great Barrier Reef?
World-first research conducted by Queensland University of Technology geologist Dr Scott Bryan indicates that yes, this is not only possible, but could be how the Great Barrier Reef formed in the first place.
Dr Bryan and colleagues studied the westward flow or rafting of pumice after volcanic eruptions in Tonga in 2001 and 2006.
Pumice forms when frothy molten rock cools rapidly and forms a lightweight bubble-rich rock that can float in water.
Dr Bryan said his study found plants and tiny animals including corals latched onto pumice as it was swept by ocean currents towards north eastern Australia.
“The pumice raft created after the 2006 Home Reef volcano erupted in Tonga initially formed at least a 440 square kilometre floating mass,” he said.
“This mass slowly broke up into streaks and millions to billions of marine organisms such as cyanobacteria, barnacles, molluscs, corals, anemones, and crabs began hitching a ride.
“The pumice we observed travelled more than 5000 kilometres in eight months and for the first time we were able to document the more than 80 species of plant and animal life that made the journey with it.
“Some biological cargo latched on in the waters around Tonga and Fiji while others came aboard elsewhere along the raft’s 900+ day journey.”
Dr Bryan said when these tiny corals, coralline algae, anemones and other reef dwellers arrived in north-eastern waters they became part of the Great Barrier Reef.
“This is good news because we know the reef is being replenished as a result of volcanic activity in the south-west Pacific and volcanic activity is frequent with eruptions in the area occurring every five to 10 years,” he said.
“On the downside, marine pests, for example some species of sponge or mussel, can also be carried along on the pumice.
“While our research has not yet recognised designated marine pests, even if migration occurred at a very low rate in the future, pumice rafting could bring an invasion of millions to billions of pests that we don’t yet know how to deal with.”
Dr Bryan said his research would be significant to ecologists.
“Ecologists know the types of pests present in Pacific waters and their spawning patterns so when a future pumice rafting event occurs we can be in a better position to predict and suggest pest mitigation measures,” he said.
He said prior to his research, pumice rafting had not been considered a significant factor in the dispersal of marine life for either reef revitalisation or pest invasion.
“We now have concrete proof that this is not the case,” he said.
Dr Bryan’s research paper, Rapid, Long-Distance Dispersal by Pumice Rafting, is published online in PLoS ONE.
Download high-resolution photographs here.
Media contact: Rose Trapnell, QUT media team leader, 07 3138 2361 or 0407 585 901 rose.trapnell@qut.edu.au
***
![]()
QUT News (2012). Could volcanic eruptions in the south-west Pacific save the Great Barrier Reef? QUT News
Tracing Knowledge Notification | Ειδοποίηση Στα ίχνη της Γνώσης
UNMODIFIED COPY
of the original post, out of respect to the source and readers.
Please follow the link for references and more informations.
ΑΠΑΡΑΛΛΑΚΤΟ ΑΝΤΙΓΡΑΦΟ
της πρωτότυπης δημοσίευσης με σεβασμό στην πηγή και στους αναγνώστες.
Παρακαλώ επισκεφθείτε τον σύνδεσμο για περισσότερες πληροφορίες.
Related articles
- Great Barrier Reef (noodledownunder.wordpress.com)



![The Universe can be a very gray place. But this week, we’ll look at a fine example of a class of objects that defies this trend. Many first time stargazers are surprised when the Trifid or the Orion Nebula fails to exhibit the bright splashy colors seen in Hubble photos. The fault lies not with the Universe, but in our very own eyes [...]](http://d1jqu7g1y74ds1.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/La-Superba-Wide-580x426.jpg)





![Scientists have used Chandra to make a detailed study of an enormous cloud of hot gas enveloping two large, colliding galaxies. This unusually large reservoir of gas contains as much mass as 10 billion Suns, spans about 300,000 light years, and radiates at a temperature of more than 7 million degrees. This giant gas cloud, which scientists call a "halo," is located in the system called NGC 6240. Astronomers have long known that NGC 6240 is the site of the merger of two large spiral galaxies similar in size to our own Milky Way. Each galaxy contains a supermassive black hole at its center. The black holes are spiraling toward one another, and may eventually merge to form a larger black hole [...]](http://www.nasa.gov/images/content/745197main_ngc6240_665.jpg)

![Elephants are currently being slaughtered in huge numbers in the Central African Republic (CAR), according to field reports that the WWF and WCS have received in recent days [...]](http://c1planetsavecom.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/files/2013/04/image49-600x398.jpg)


![How the modern universe is primarily composed of matter and not antimatter has foxed astrophysicists for decades, but a result from a Large Hadron Collider (LHC) experiment has uncovered a new clue behind the matter-antimatter asymmetry mystery [...]](http://static.ddmcdn.com/gif/blogs/dnews-files-2013-04-big-bang-670x440-130426-jpg.jpg)

![A few weeks ago, my friend Devin and I drove six hours out of our way so Devin could meet the Grand Canyon and so I could see it for the sixth time. We walked up to the South Rim at Mather Point, stood for a moment, both speechless and slightly unsteady on that overwhelming edge and then sat with our feet dangling into the abyss, talking a bit about rocks, rivers and trails, but mostly marveling in silence [...]](http://theblondecoyote.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/tarantula1.jpg?w=300&h=330#038;h=554)
![Sticking a Q-tip up one’s nose is not the source of many great insights. Yet it’s how an American doctor in the early 20th century developed the theory that became modern reflexology. He would be proud—though maybe a little confused—to see people today flocking to reflexology spas, where practitioners treat all their problems via the soles of their feet [...]](http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-3rlYleb3E9s/UXpknLmV54I/AAAAAAAABr0/_yk6JFEkgqo/s640/Foot-massage-chart.jpg)
![Physicists plan to create a “time crystal” — a theoretical object that moves in a repeating pattern without using energy — inside a device called an ion trap [...]](https://simonsfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/view-into-ion-trap-apparatus_web.jpg)


![Scientists don't fully understand how we detect faint sounds, because they should be drowned out by the background noise that the ear itself produces. Now, however, researchers at UCLA have produced clues to the process that allows us to hear a pin drop, or understand a whispered comment. They did so using hair cells taken from bullfrogs that they studied in laboratory glassware [...]](http://www.insidescience.org/sites/default/files/hearing-top%20image.jpg)
![A strange stellar pair nearly 7,000 light-years from Earth has provided physicists with a unique cosmic laboratory for studying the nature of gravity. The extremely strong gravity of a massive neutron star in orbit with a companion white dwarf star puts competing theories of gravity to a test more stringent than any available before. Once again, Albert Einstein's General Theory of Relativity, published in 1915, comes out on top [...]](http://www.nrao.edu/pr/2013/gravitylab/nsandwd.small.jpg)

















![An area in the northwest of the Democratic Republic of Congo is pictured in this image taken on 26 June 2011 by the French SPOT-4 satellite. Most of the lighter green areas are deforested, while the darker green are areas of dense – and possibly natural – vegetation. The lines cutting through the image are roads, many with structures built along them. Clusters of purple dots are larger settlements. A river snakes through the upper part of the image and below it there appears to be a square in light green. Judging by the precision of the outline, we can deduce that this is a patch of land that was either intentionally spared from deforestation or has been reforested [...]](http://spaceinimages.esa.int/var/esa/storage/images/esa_multimedia/images/2013/04/democratic_republic_of_congo/12630824-1-eng-GB/Democratic_Republic_of_Congo_node_full_image.jpg)
![Η πρώτη βροχή διαττόντων αστέρων της άνοιξης, οι Λυρίδες, άρχισαν δειλά-δειλά να εμφανίζονται στον ουρανό του βορείου ημισφαιρίου, όπου ανήκει και η Ελλάδα. Οι πτώσεις των συγκεκριμένων μετεώρων, που αποκαλούνται και «πεφταστέρια», θα αποκορυφωθούν την Κυριακή 21 και τη Δευτέρα 22 Απριλίου, ενώ θα διαρκέσουν σε πιο αραιή μορφή έως τις 25 του μηνός [...]](http://physicsgg.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/lyrids-2013-april-22_edited-1.jpg?w=300&h=270#038;h=443)





![Europe's best-known mummy wasn't just a medical mess; he also had terrible teeth, according to a new study. Ötzi (inset photo), a Stone Age man who died atop a glacier about 5300 years ago, suffered from severe gum disease and cavities. His teeth, back and front, were also heavily worn from chewing coarse grain and use as a "third hand" for gripping tools and cutting. When Ötzi was discovered atop a glacier on the Austro-Italian border, his frozen corpse was intensively studied. But no one took a close look at his teeth until now [...]](http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/assets/2013/04/10/sn-otziteeth.jpg)
![Sometime in the early Jurassic period, between 190 and 197 million years ago, a flood swept through a dinosaur nesting site in what is now southern China. Dozens of embryos were suffocated in their eggs and their bones were separated from each other, carried away, and buried under sediment [...]](http://www.the-scientist.com/images/News/April2013/Dinosaur_embryo.jpg)


![Dramatic underground explosions, perhaps involving ice, are responsible for the pits inside these two large martian impact craters, imaged by ESA’s Mars Express on 4 January. The ‘twin’ craters are in the Thaumasia Planum region, a large plateau that lies immediately to the south of Valles Marineris, the largest canyon in the Solar System. The northernmost (right) large crater in this scene was officially given the name Arima in early 2012, but the southernmost (left) crater remains unnamed. Both are just over 50 km wide and display intricate interior features [...]](http://www.esa.int/var/esa/storage/images/esa_multimedia/images/2013/04/arima_twins_topography/12612851-1-eng-GB/Arima_twins_topography_large.jpg)




![SARA KOSCHAK AND HER partner, Andrew Skeoch, have been recording nature for 20 years. It’s a venture driven solely by passion, in which the pair capture the sounds of natural settings from Africa to Indian, Europe to the Americas, Australia, and deep into the jungles of the Pacific islands, creating CDs and downloadable files to transport listerners from their homes to a soundscape far away. The recordings are available through an online store, but many are free and are accessible through the couple's website, Listening Earth. “Nature recordings are our way of sharing a passion and love,” says Sarah. But her desire to record the soundscape of the Tarkine region – a wild system of rainforest and lush native wilderness in Tasmania's north-west – was motivated by something more pressing [...]](http://www.australiangeographic.com.au/assets/images/article/journal/13384/tarkine-main.jpg)




Share & Enjoy Knowledge -Tracing Knowledge – Στα Ίχνη της Γνώσης | tumblr
Tracing Knowledge – Στα Ίχνη της Γνώσης | YouTube Channel Video Collection | Συλλογή Βίντεο
Tracing Knowledge | Στα Ίχνη της Γνώσης – Google +
Tracing Knowledge | Στα Ίχνη της Γνώσης – Pinterest
Tracing Knowledge | Στα Ίχνη της Γνώσης – Research Blogging
Tracing Knowledge | Στα Ίχνη της Γνώσης – ScoopIt
Tracing Knowledge | Στα Ίχνη της Γνώσης – StumbleUpon