The other night my local scuba club announced that they were starting a program to establish mooring buoys on our reef system. This has been vetted through the host country's Environmental Protection Agency, and they are excited that us divers would take the initiative.
During the discussion at the club meeting one member was pretty adamant about making sure this was the best conservational practice to use in order to protect our reef. He was quoting a marine biologist that stated mooring buoys' tether destroys the reef. While I can visualize this I could not find any supporting research to support this claim. I just cannot see how deploying two anchors into the reef with the hopes of striking sand and not coral would be a better conservational method than anchoring to a mooring buoy.
Does anyone have any supporting scientific research concerning mooring buoys' destruction to the reef's ecosystem?
Thanks,
~Oldbear~
During the discussion at the club meeting one member was pretty adamant about making sure this was the best conservational practice to use in order to protect our reef. He was quoting a marine biologist that stated mooring buoys' tether destroys the reef. While I can visualize this I could not find any supporting research to support this claim. I just cannot see how deploying two anchors into the reef with the hopes of striking sand and not coral would be a better conservational method than anchoring to a mooring buoy.
Does anyone have any supporting scientific research concerning mooring buoys' destruction to the reef's ecosystem?
Thanks,
~Oldbear~