The
reason why we are in Australia is of course because my research and
after a month's work it is time for some fresh scientific results!
My
research project is funded by the Danish government, but my research
animal is a tropical starfish called the crown-of-thorns starfish.
The starfish is a big problem now since it will only eat corals and
over the last 30 years they have been responsible for 40% of the
coral loss at the Great Barrier Reef in Australia. Corals are very
important since they create a habitat in which many fish thrive. In
short, many marine animals rely on corals in one or more stages
during their life and when corals disappear many marine animals will
suffer. Coral decline is not good news for tourism either...
If
you want to do research on the Great Barrier Reef the Marine Station
where we are now is great. It is called the Australian Institute of
Marine science, abbreviated to AIMS. It's an Australian wide
governmental research institution and it carries out a lot of
important research on the Great Barrier Reef.
Recently,
my good friend and colleague in Denmark, Anders, published a paper
together with the supervisor from my Ph.D. study Dan-Eric Nilsson,
showing how another Coral Reef inhabiting starfish uses its eyes to
find its way back to the reef. At this point in time we already have
proof that the crown-of-thorns starfish does the same and it too uses
its eyes to find coral reefs.
What
I am doing here in Townsville is finding out which particular visual
cues are used by the starfish. I have good laboratory facilities and
in short what I do is, I put the animals in a circular arena where I
can control what the animals see on the horizon. I put patterns with
different sizes, grey tone, stripes and circles onto the horizon of
the arena and see whether the animals respond to the patterns or not.
From this I can determine exactly which visual cue they use for
navigation.
The
exact causes of the recent increase in numbers of crown-of-thorns
starfish and the resulting decrease of Coral reefs is still debated
along with the role that humans play in this phenomenon. I actually
went to an interesting lecture today just about this topic. I'm quite
convinced my project won't be able to address the cause of the
problem, however I'm hoping my findings will help constructing a bait
for the animals which will make it easier to catch starfish and
reduce their numbers on a short-term basis giving us time to find the
cause of the problem and act.






2 comments:
Wat fantastisch om te lezen over je onderzoek. Hopelijk gaat het nog steeds net zo voorspoedig... Helaas zijn er in Nederland geen leuke koralen of zeesterren die je kunt onderzoeken!!
Groetjes uit Den Haag
Så roligt att få se dina sjöstjärnor och höra mer om arbetet: det låter väldigt viktigt och lovande :) Keep up the good work ;)
Kram från Charlotte
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