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Deep-water reefs off the southeastern U.S.: recent discoveries and research

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Date Issued:
2005
Title: Deep-water reefs off the southeastern U.S.: recent discoveries and research.
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Name(s): Reed, John K.
Ross, S. W.
Type of Resource: text
Genre: Article
Date Issued: 2005
Publisher: National Marine Education Association.
Place of Publication: Gloucester Point, Va.
Physical Form: pdf
Extent: 6 p.
Language(s): English
Identifier: FA00007074 (IID)
Note(s): Some of the most spectacular corals found off the southeastern U.S. were discovered as recently as the 1970s in an unexpected place—the deep waters along the edge of the continental shelf. These banks of Oculina corals extend for 167 km along the eastern Florida shelf. Unfortunately, even as they were being discovered by scientists, the Oculina banks had already been damaged by trawl-fishing activity. Parts of the reef have been protected since 1984, and the protected area was expanded in 2000, but the story of the Oculina banks’ discovery and their damage by fishing activity is all too typical of the deep-water coral ecosystems that live and die, almost entirely unknown to the average person, in the deep waters off of some of the most populated and well explored coastlines in the world.
Florida Atlantic University. Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute contribution 1594
This manuscript is an author version with the final publication available and may be cited as: Reed, J. K., and Ross, S. W. (2005). Deep-water reefs off the southeastern U.S.: recent discoveries and research. The Journal of Marine Education, 21(4), 33-37.
Subject(s): Southeastern United States
Deep sea corals
Reefs
Oculinidae
Corals--Ecology
Trawl fishing
Coral declines
Persistent Link to This Record: http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00007074
Host Institution: FAU