A giant starfish-eating snail could be unleashed to help save the Great
Barrier Reef, officials said Monday, with a trial underway to breed
thousands of the rare species.
Predatory crown-of-thorns starfish, which munch coral, are
naturally-occurring but have proliferated due to pollution and run-off
at the struggling World Heritage-listed ecosystem.
Their impact has been profound with a major study of the
2,300-kilometre (1,400-mile) long reef's health in 2012 showing coral
cover halved over the past 27 years, with 42 percent of the damage
attributed to the pest.
Now Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) research has shown
they avoid areas where the Pacific triton sea snail -- also known as the
giant triton -- is present.
The snails -- which can grow to half a metre -- have a well developed sense of smell and can hunt their prey by scent alone.
Research showed they were particularly fond of crown-of-thorns, but
only eat a few each week, and with the snail almost hunted to extinction
for their shells, there are not many left.
This led the Australian government to Monday announce funding to research breeding them.
"The possibilities the triton breeding project opens up are exciting," said Queensland federal MP Warren Entsch.
"If successful, this research will allow scientists to closely look
at the impact of giant tritons on crown-of-thorns behaviour and test
their potential as a management tool to help reduce coral lost to
outbreaks."
Giant tritons held at AIMS have laid numerous egg capsules, with over
100,000 swimming larvae hatching in the last month. But they are so
rare, almost nothing is known about their life cycle.
The research will focus on helping the larvae transition to their
juvenile and adult stages, providing valuable insights into their
biology, with the ultimate aim to deploy them to prevent crown-of-thorns
aggregating closely during spawning seasons.
Until now expensive chemicals such as bile salts have been used to
try and eradicate the starfish, but they can harm other marine
organisms.
In April, research showed they can be safely killed by common
household vinegar, but dive teams would need to individually inject each
starfish before it dies and breaks-up, making it a massive job.
The Great Barrier Reef, the largest living structure on Earth, is
also reeling from an unprecedented second straight year of coral
bleaching due to warming sea temperatures linked to climate change.
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