Expedition led
by Nova Southeastern University 's
National Coral Reef Institute discovers wealth of wildlife
March 2013. When Jim Thomas and his global team of researchers returned to the Madang Lagoon in
"In the
Madang Lagoon, we went a half mile out off the leading edge of the active
Australian Plate and were in 6,000 metres of water," said Thomas, Ph.D., a
researcher at Nova Southeastern University's National Coral Reef Institute in
Hollywood, Fla. "It was once believed there were no reefs on the north
coast of Papua New Guinea since there were no shallow bays and lagoons typical
of most coral reef environments. But there was lots of biodiversity to be
found."
New species
Thomas and his team discovered new species of sea slugs (nudibranchs), feather stars (crinoids) and amphipods (genus Leucothoe). There was more variety of these indicator species found than there is in the entire length ofAustralia 's 1,600-mile Great
Barrier Reef .
Thomas and his team discovered new species of sea slugs (nudibranchs), feather stars (crinoids) and amphipods (genus Leucothoe). There was more variety of these indicator species found than there is in the entire length of
Amphipod (genus Leucothoe), discovered by
Nova Southeastern University Professor Jim Thomas, Ph.D.
(PRNewsFoto/Nova Southeastern University's
|
"This was
an astonishing discovery," Thomas said. "We returned to our labs and
began to formally assess our collections. We had no idea this lagoon's bounty
was so profound."
The
international team Thomas led included researchers from and the Scripps
Institute of Oceanography in San Diego , the
California Academy of Sciences and the National
Botanical Gardens of Ireland . Their
3-week expedition ended late last year. While in Madang, they joined a large
French contingent of scientists from the Paris Museum of Natural History. The
NSU-led research team's findings will be shared with the local villagers, as
well as regional and federal governments. It will also be published in
peer-reviewed journals.
Environmental
threats
The Madang Lagoon faces many environmental threats by land-based pollution from a recently opened tuna cannery whose outfall is very close to the lagoon's reefs. "Hopefully, our discoveries will strongly encourage governing bodies to recognize the environmental importance of the lagoon and work to stop the pollution," Thomas said.
The Madang Lagoon faces many environmental threats by land-based pollution from a recently opened tuna cannery whose outfall is very close to the lagoon's reefs. "Hopefully, our discoveries will strongly encourage governing bodies to recognize the environmental importance of the lagoon and work to stop the pollution," Thomas said.
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