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Here’s The Scoop…We Made The News…

June 21, 2009 by Barbara

PEER REVIEW….

Dear Readers …the Coral Reef project …(previous posts) …a project “spearheaded” by Marc Furth…( along with former Mayor Wardlaw)…with the dais assist from BFF VM Mcintee….has received some good news….and some bad…Either we are about to embark on something to put us on the map or we have been duped…..Even this project is not without lack of backup …according to the article…..ARGHHHH…

Excerpts…

‘Lauderdale-by-the-Sea – A proposal to install an electrified artificial reef on the ocean floor off Lauderdale-by-the-Sea has won approval from a key federal agency, making it more likely the high-tech conservation project will get built.

The Army Corps of Engineers issued a permit to the town to work with Global Coral Reef Alliance, of Cambridge, Mass., to install a cluster of metal structures that would use a low-voltage current to stimulate the growth of corals, creating habitat for fish and other marine creatures. The group has used the patented Biorock process to construct artificial reefs in several other countries, including Mexico, Jamaica and Indonesia.

Under the town’s $65,000 contract with the group, structures that resemble six-foot-long Quonset huts would be placed on the ocean floor in shallow water. Divers would collect pieces of living coral that had been broken off by storms or ship groundings and attach them to the metal structures. Two buoys equipped with solar panels would provide the electricity through insulated cables. The electrical current would draw dissolved minerals from the water, causing the minerals to build up on the metal structures. According to the group’s web site, corals grow three to five times faster under these conditions and stand a better chance of surviving stressful events such as increases in water temperature.

Thomas Goreau, president of Global Coral Reef Alliance, declined at first to discuss the project, saying he was unhappy with a previous Sun Sentinel article that quoted “people who didn’t know what they were talking about” questioning the value of the technology.

McManus said Goreau hasn’t published peer-reviewed studies comparing electrified reefs with identical structures in similar habitat without electricity, making it difficult to make a fair assessment of the technology. But he said the Biorock reefs do seed an area with coral, and said there is experimental evidence that the technology enhances the growth and survival of newly transplanted corals.

“It doesn’t seem to do much after the first four months, but the first four months are critical,” he said.

Goreau, in an e-mail, said neither Dodge nor McManus had first-hand knowledge of his work, although he considered them competent scientists. He said he had done comparative experiments but was focused now on saving corals at a time when they’re dying around the world.

“We have deliberately not published most of our results, because we are too busy getting results growing reefs full of corals and fish while there is still a dwindling window to do so, and don’t have the patience to play these academic games fiddling while Rome burns,” he wrote. “We prefer people to see for themselves what really works, because the results are so overwhelming.”

He said there have been “a dozen or more” peer-reviewed papers on the process, most of which he said were posted on his web page, which contains many papers on various coral topics, many of which lack any indication of where or if they were published.

Asked to take a look at the papers on the website, Dodge responded in an e-mail, “I looked at the website and didn’t find any peer-reviewed articles that demonstrate that organisms on Biorock reefs grow better, faster, are more healthy, etc. than others.”

It’s unclear when the project will get built. Goreau said the construction is probably several months off. Ken Banks, natural resource specialist with Broward County’s Environmental Protection and Growth Management Department, said they need a permit from the county. He said he couldn’t discuss whether they were likely to get one because they had not yet filed an application.

Lauderdale-by-the-Sea is known as one of the best spots for beach diving because the reefs are accessible from shore. Steve d’Oliveira, spokesman for Lauderdale-by-the-Sea, said the town supports the project.

“We want it done as soon as possible,” he said.’

full text link below….

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/community/news/lauderdale_by_the_sea/sfl-electrified-reef-b062009,0,4283894.story

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We Made The FRONT PAGE Of The Papers…$60,000 LBTS Project…But Will It Work?

October 7, 2008 by Barbara

“Lauderdale-by-the-sea will try electricity to

stimulate coral growth off South Florida coast

Low voltage current to stimulate coral growth off our coast”

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/southflorida/sfl-flbcoral1007sboct07,0,1759467.story

The Furth-McIntee Coral Reef Project…has some noted experts questioning it’s ability to deliver….

PUBLIC HEARING…

March 4…7-9 pm…International Game Fish Assoc. 300 Gulf Stream Way, Dania Beach…

Comments also may be sent in…

Assistant Regional Administrator, Projected Resources Division

National Marine Fisheries Service, Southeast Regional Office

263 13th Ave. South

St. Petersburg,Fl. 33701

or on the web….www.regulations.gov...using the identification number 0648-AV35

deadline is May 6

OOPS…left out in the dust once more…. the resident who brought this to the Town …Furth and McIntee,,,

Former Mayor Ken Wardlaw…

Note: The former Mayor sent this writer numerous e-mails with the accounts of his role in the project…

more to come…

“The cables are part of an ambitious underwater experiment that uses low-voltage electrical stimuli to revive the badly damaged coral reef. (AP)”

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/broward/

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Coral Reefs….Calypso…pre-planning stage…

October 4, 2008 by Barbara

http://209.85.165.104/search?q=cache:sMmnJr_H3h0J:ccmaserver.nos.noaa.gov/ecosystems/

coralreef/coral2008/pdf/FloridaSE.pdf+b+cole+lauderdale+by+the+sea&hl=e

SCROLL TO PAGE 9…Calypso…

“Offshore Oil and Gas Exploration There continues to be no oil or gas drilling operations in the state waters of southeast Florida.OtherSubsea Engineering Projects: Gas Pipelines and Fiber Optic Cables Installation of fiber optic cables and construction of gas pipelines can have a major impact on coral reefs. Stony corals, gorgonians and sponges can become abraded or dislodged during pipeline installation, increased sedimentation and leaks of drilling mud and lubricants during horizontal directional drilling (HDD) can smother corals, and resultant increases in turbidity reduces the amount of light necessary for healthy function. Although cables have a small impact footprint, cor-als and other reef organisms can be chronically impacted by shading and abrasion (PBS&J, 1999). Storm events can lead to movement of cables on the substrate, which can result in abrasion of corals and reef substrate. Over the last twenty years there has been over 12 acres of nearshore reef damaged during pipeline installation in southeastern Florida (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. SE Region, 2004). There are two gas pipeline projects currently being reviewed for permits in the southeast Florida region, AES Ocean Express and Calypso U.S. Pipeline, LLC, and they are expected to incur greater than seven acres and 4.5 acres of reef damage, respectively. Both of these projects plan to pipe liquid natural gas from facilities in the Bahamas to exit points in Broward County. However, as an alternative, Calypso is proposing a deepwater port approximately 10 miles offshore from Port Everglades. There have been no new fiber optic cable permits issued since 2001 for the southeast Florida region (Vince, pers. comm.). Since 2003, recommendations have been made to minimize impacts to reef systems, such as decreasing tur-bidity thresholds, using reef gaps to lay cables, implementation of tunneling and elimination of HDD, coral relocation for corals at risk, and increased monitoring and mitigation…..”

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