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Section2_PDF.qxd 10/15/04 3:17 PM Page 24 the state of the of the U.S. Virgin Islands What are Virgin Islands coral reefs like today? PHOTO: J E FF M ILLE R A 10-year-old child snorkeling on the reefs in the USVI today would find a very pretty scene. But the child’s grandfather would have seen a very different reef when he was a child. Even someone who snorkeled on the reefs in the 1970s and 1980s and then returned today would be shocked by the changes and the degraded condition of the reefs. Reefs closer to shore and in shallower water have changed the most. These are the ones most affected by storm seas, by runoff of sediment from land, and by anchor damage. More broken branches and rubble are found on the reefs from storms, anchors, and boats running aground. The water surrounding the reefs is not as clear as it used to be, either, because more and more sediment from construction sites, roads, and driveways is washing into the ocean when it rains. The bays stay turbid and stirred up for longer than they used to. A few fish species have vanished or are very rare, and fishes of many species are generally smaller. Goliath and Nassau groupers; midnight, blue, and rainbow parrotfish; hogfish and spadefish, numerous even 30 years ago, are now seldom or never seen. Fewer long-spined black sea urchins graze on the algae, though their numbers are increasing in very shallow zones. There seem to be fewer colorful banded coral shrimp, feather dusters, and other reef animals. 24 Section2_PDF.qxd 10/15/04 3:17 PM Page 25 Algae grows over dead coral. On most coral reefs in the USVI, living coral covers only about 20 percent of the bottom; algae is more abundant. BELOW: More coral diseases are seen on the reefs, too, and they affect more of the colonies. Diseases are found even on corals 90 feet deep. White plague is the most severe; it affects 18 coral species, including star coral, the most important reef-builder on the reefs in moderate depths. The tops of many of the star corals are dead and covered with algae. No large, reef-building coral has taken the place of the elkhorn corals that dominated the shallowest zones until about 20 to 25 years ago, when over 90 percent of them were killed by disease and hurricanes. Because elkhorn coral has collapsed in many places, the reef is physically less complex—with fewer holes, nooks, and crevices to shelter fish, lobsters, sea urchins, and other animals. Some shallow reefs have new elkhorn colonies. But very few locations exhibit dense patches of large colonies with intertwining branches like those found on the most impressive reefs in the 1970s. The most vibrant reefs—those with the most fish, the most actively growing corals, and the best water clarity—are usually found far from shore and where currents are strongest, such as Flat Cay off St. Thomas, Johnson’s Reef off St. John, and Buck Island Reef off St. Croix. Vibrant reefs are also found in deep water— 150 feet or more—on or near the shelf edge. The Marine Conservation District south of St. Thomas, for example, contains extensive coral reefs with nearly 100 percent live coral cover. PHOTO: CAROLI N E ROG E R S On most reefs, living coral covers less than 20 percent of the bottom and algae are more abundant. Yet about 25 years ago, living coral cover on several reefs was over 40 percent. Today, small colonies of mustard coral (Porites astreoides) and common brain coral (Diploria strigosa) are more numerous than are the small individuals of the major reef-building corals, star coral (Montastraea annularis) and elkhorn coral (Acropora palmata). 25 10/15/04 P O I N T 3:17 PM Page 26 “Twenty years ago, you could always see sharks and groupers. Now groupers are totally fished out, and the balance of the ecosystem is gone. ” O F jack randall As ichthyologists—or fish scientists—go, John E. (Jack) Randall is at the top; he is well known and well respected. He was one of the first scientists to research coral reef fish and habitat in the U.S. Virgin Islands, and published a book entitled Caribbean Reef Fishes in 1968. He has since studied coral reefs all over the world, writing books such as Guide to Hawaiian Reef Fishes, Fishes of the Great Barrier Reef and Coral Sea, and Sharks of Arabia. Just after President Eisenhower authorized the creation of Virgin Islands National Park in 1956, the Park Service asked Jack Randall if he would direct a survey of St. John’s marine life. Jack agreed, and he, along with a team of scientists—including his wife Helen—created the first-ever marine habitat maps of the island. While they were in the Virgin Islands, the Randalls carried out and published research on numerous coral reef species, including parrotfishes, queen conch, and the sea urchin Diadema. PHOTO: AR MAN DO J E N I K Section2_PDF.qxd Then, the Park superintendent asked Jack to go to Buck Island off St. Croix and to shoot some film of the marine life there. “At first, I wasn’t terribly interested,” he said, “but I went, and I made a film of nesting birds and turtles and lots of underwater life. Well, not too long thereafter, President Kennedy proclaimed Buck Island a national monument, and they said that the film helped to persuade him.” Jack Randall hasn’t been back to the Virgin Islands for many years, but he has vivid memories of what it was like underwater. “When I was in the Virgin Islands in the late 1950s and early ’60s, the reefs were beautiful—there wasn’t a trace of bleaching. There were still a lot of top predators visible, but even so, I noticed that some of the fish were getting fished out. Queen triggerfish were getting hard to find, as were larger grunts. I could see the effect of overfishing, even in the few years that I was there.” “Coral reef ecosystems have changed dramatically since I first began studying reef fishes. Twenty years ago, you could always see sharks and groupers. Now, groupers are totally fished out, and the balance of the ecosystem is gone.” Is he optimistic that humans can save coral reefs? Or has the damage gone too far? “Fishermen are going to keep fishing until it’s gone. You can’t get the idea of marine reserves across; they just shout you down. The only saving thing may be mercury—the amount of mercury in fish may be the only thing that keeps us from fishing down to the last fish.” 26 Section2_PDF.qxd 10/15/04 3:17 PM Page 27 Coral Reef Research in the U.S. Virgin Islands Undersea research in the U.S. Virgin Islands—beginning in the late 1950s— has contributed much to our understanding of coral reef ecosystems worldwide. CORAL REEF RESEARCH, THE EARLY DAYS In 1956 Laurance Rockefeller gave the U.S. National Park Service a generous gift of 5,000 acres of land on the island of St. John. In August of 1956, that land became the Virgin Islands National Park, when President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the bill officially designating the national park. Two years later, the Park Service invited fish scientist John E. (Jack) Randall to help survey marine life in the area. From 1958 through 1961, Jack, his wife Helen Randall, Herman Kumpf, and students and professors from University of Miami and elsewhere made over 250 collections of ocean life around St. John. They also produced the very first maps of the island’s marine environments. The Randalls’ species collections, scientific papers, extensive survey of reef fish food habits, and maps were not only some of the very first scientific work carried out in the islands, they influenced many subsequent studies of Virgin Islands marine life. In addition, the film footage that Jack Randall shot of the reefs off Buck Island is said to have influenced President John F. Kennedy in his decision to declare Buck Island and its reefs a national monument. TOP RIGHT: An aerial shot of Buck Island. After viewing a film by Jack Randall of Buck Island’s marine life, President Kennedy designated Buck Island Reef National Monument. LOWER RIGHT: Diver uses video monitoring technique to note changes in the reef. PHOTO: ROB WAARA Just as the moon was the goal in the early days of space exploration, Virgin Islands coral reefs attracted many early, seminal underwater scientific expeditions. Today, research programs in the islands cover the full spectrum of marine science. Local and national agencies and organizations are collaborating to investigate a wide variety of issues vital to the health of coral reefs, including environmental causes behind coral bleaching, the behavior of reef fishes and other reef inhabitants, and the impacts of runoff and sediment from land. PHOTO: NATIONAL PAR K SE RVICE THE STATE OF THE REEFS 27 Section2_PDF.qxd 10/15/04 3:17 PM Page 28 UNDERSEA SATURATION DIVING HABITATS IN THE VIRGIN ISLANDS In 1969, the first of these expeditions, Tektite I, allowed four scientists to live at the bottom of Lameshur Bay, off St. John, for 60 days. The aquanauts observed the reef through dives and from inside the underwater habitat itself. During a Tektite II mission in 1970, a team of five women scientists lived in the habitat. Over two weeks, aquanaut Sylvia Earle logged 86 hours in the water, which would have taken two months using surface diving. Aquanauts could come and go freely into the ocean ecosystem through a “wet room,” which had a tunnel and stairs leading to the outside. Scientists did not return to the surface after diving, but rather to the underwater habitat. This permitted them to increase their diving time by as much as 10 times over traditional surface diving techniques. Instead of decompressing near the end of each dive, aquanauts would decompress inside the habitat over 17 hours at the end of their mission. The U.S. Navy, the Department of the Interior, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) sponsored the scientific project. They chose the Lameshur Bay site not only because of its location within Virgin Islands National Park, but also because of its diversity of habitats—coral reefs, seagrass beds, PHOTO: NATIONAL UNDERSEA RESEARCH PROGRAM Beginning in the late 1960s, local coral reefs were the subject of hundreds of expeditions carried out in undersea “habitats.” These habitats were really pressurized laboratories and living quarters combined, enabling scientists to spend much longer periods of time studying coral reefs, seagrass beds, and algal plains than surface diving allowed. ABOVE: Divers swim near the Tektite habitat in Lameshur Bay. Because they stayed in the habitat and did not return to the surface after each dive, divers could spend more time underwater and decompress all at once near the end of their missions. and algal plain. NASA was interested in how living in a confined area for extended periods of time affected the aquanauts, which had obvious implications for space exploration. The name “Tektite” in fact comes from the glassy meteorites that are often found on the ocean floor. Tektite scientists mapped the underwater topography of Lameshur Bay, studied the migration patterns of plankton, and observed the habits of reef fishes, conchs, and lobsters. From 1977 through 1985, NOAA deployed another underwater habitat, Hydrolab, in Salt River Canyon off St. Croix. Although it accommodated only four scientists at a time, Hydrolab housed a total of 352 aquanauts from over 120 scientific groups. Hydrolab scientists were among the first to notice the massive die-off of Diadema sea urchins in 1983, which spread throughout the Caribbean. The Aquarius undersea laboratory followed on the heels of Hydrolab in 1987. Sponsored by NOAA’s National Undersea Research Program, Aquarius was also deployed in the waters of Salt River Canyon. There, it housed 13 scientific missions, enabling aquanauts to learn more about deep reef ecology, geology, and oceanography. INCREASING KNOWLEDGE THROUGH COOPERATION Much of our baseline information on coral reefs in the USVI comes from studies carried out from 1983 through 1986 by members of the Virgin Islands Resource Management Cooperative (VIRMC). VIRMC was established in 1982 by public and private institutions in the U.S. Virgin Islands, British Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico. Under the leadership of the Virgin Islands National Park, VIRMC originally included 13 cooperating institutions, which recognized the need for a collaborative approach in managing natural resources in the Virgin Islands. In 1983 VIRMC launched an ambitious five-year, half-million-dollar research program financed by the U.S. National Park Service. Thirty-three investigators from nine VIRMCaffiliated institutions carried out 30 research studies, largely focused on the marine resources of the U.S. and British Virgin Islands. The resulting technical reports totaled over 2,300 pages and constitute one of the most intensive data collection efforts ever carried out in a protected area in the Eastern Caribbean. The Island Resources Foundation acted as the local contracting agent for the project. 28 Section2_PDF.qxd 10/15/04 3:17 PM Page 29 “We saw quite a few Nassau groupers and really big snappers, both of which are rare today. Now the only robust species you see under water are divers.” P O I N T O F sylvia earle “At the time of Tektite II,” Earle says, “sea and space were closely connected. Astronauts were on the moon in 1969, and there was a lot of enthusiasm about the oceans. President Kennedy himself said, ‘We know more about the back side of the moon than we do about the ocean bottom.’ NASA supported the Tektite mission because they felt it could teach important lessons about space exploration.” When Sylvia returned from the Tektite mission, she was invited to address Congress on what she had learned. Today, few lawmakers or citizens are paying much attention to ocean exploration. “We’ve forgotten about the oceans,” says Earle. PHOTO ABOVE: NATIONAL UNDERSEA RESEARCH PROGRAM / NATIONAL PARK SERVICE. What did she learn from her two weeks on the bottom of Lameshur Bay? “I really got to know fish as something more than just seafood on a plate with drawn butter. I got to know fish as individuals. I would get up early, just to see which fish got up when. I watched a group of five angelfish; I watched parrotfish spinning their sleeping bags; and at night, I watched squirrelfish. I followed their behavior, and I could do so because I was there all the time.” For the Tektite mission, “The project leaders chose a beautiful pristine reef some 600 feet offshore. The reef showed no evidence of disease. We saw quite a few Nassau groupers and really big snappers, both of which are rare today. Now the only robust species you see under water are divers.” Does she believe that coral reefs can come back? “Well, even though half have disappeared over the past 50 years, the good news is that 50 percent are in good shape,” says Earle. “The ocean is resilient, so if we turn off all the bad things we’re putting into it, the ocean can heal. Striped bass were on the edge, and then we stopped killing them and they came back. We stopped whaling, and we protected an important gray whale nursery in Baja California, and the gray whales are doing well. We’ve come to understand that to save ducks and geese, we have to protect wetlands and flyways. If we’re going to save fish and ocean life, we’ve got to start protecting undersea habitats, too.” PHOTO: J EFF M ILLE R Sylvia Earle was captain of one of the Tektite II missions carried out in Lameshur Bay off St. John in 1970. Today, she is among the world’s best-known ocean scientists and explorers. A former chief scientist of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and current National Geographic explorer-in-residence, she has clocked more than 6,000 hours under water and holds the world record for the deepest solo dive at 1,250 feet. In 1998, Time magazine named her "Hero for the Planet.” 29 Section2_PDF.qxd T H E 10/15/04 S T A T E 3:17 PM O F Page 30 T H E R E E F S What We’re Learning from USVI Reefs Because of their coral reef ecosystems, the U.S. Virgin Islands have long been an important location for scientific research. The islands’ increasing population and coastal development have also made them important case studies for how human activities are affecting the world’s coral reefs and the ocean life that depends on them. The establishment of Virgin Islands Coral Reef National Monument and the expansion of the Buck Island Reef National Monument in 2001 were major events in coral reef conservation and management. Yet these monuments would not exist today if it were not for the long-term research performed in the USVI documenting the degradation of the marine habitats and loss of fish species. Such declines have even been documented in marine protected areas such as the national parks, which have been in place for 40 years. The decision to prohibit anchoring and fishing in these new areas is a major step towards possible recovery and replenishment of USVI reef systems. WHITE PLAGUE AT TEKTITE REEF Doctors perform meticulous tests to determine what makes a person ill and what can be done about it. Is it bacterial infection that antibiotics can cure? Is it a virus that will run its course with fluids and rest? PHOTO: E R I N N M U LLE R With the exception of Jamaica and Panama, the USVI has the longest data sets and longest history of ongoing research in the Caribbean. Monitoring of coral reefs in the Virgin Islands National Park began in the 1970s and ’80s, and these efforts have provided some of the best continuous data on coral reefs, representing nearly 20 years of research and monitoring. Long-term projects began at Yawzi Reef in Great Lameshur Bay in 1989 and Newfound Bay in 1990. Video monitoring began in 1999 at these sites and at Haulover Bay, and more recently, at Mennebeck Bay. These projects have contributed a great deal to our understanding of how hurricanes and overfishing affect coral reefs, and how the increase in coral diseases has affected the health of coral reef ecosystems. Scientists have also documented declines in both live coral cover and fish populations around St. John. BELOW: White pox is the most serious disease affecting elkhorn corals in the USVI today. 30 Section2_PDF.qxd 10/15/04 3:17 PM Page 31 LEFT: White band disease has also caused serious declines in elkhorn coral in the U.S. Virgin Islands. PHOTO: CAROLI NE ROG E R S Understanding diseases in coral reefs is much more difficult. Even when we can determine what the disease is, we can’t cure it. Yet understanding what happens after a coral becomes diseased, and how coral reefs are affected by disease overall, is vital to coral reef management and conservation. Scientists with the National Park Service in St. John have been monitoring the effects of white plague at Tektite Reef, one of the most beautiful reefs in the Virgin Islands. This disease affects 18 types of corals and attacks the primary reef-building species, small star coral (Montastraea annularis) very aggressively. Because it targets the most abundant, primary reef-building coral— which grows slowly and produces few new colonies to replace the ones that have been lost—white plague represents a significant threat to reefs in the Virgin Islands and other areas of the Caribbean. Since December 1997, these scientists have observed loss of live coral from white plague at Tektite Reef every month. The rate of growth for small star coral is about threeeighths of an inch per year in shallow water, and less in deeper water. White plague can advance across a colony, killing the coral at a rate of inches to tens of inches per month. Once the plague has killed the coral, macroalgae, or seaweeds, typically grow over the dead area. After several years, new corals may settle and begin to grow over the area, but they are usually not a major reef-builder species such as the small star coral. To date, scientists have not observed any healing over portions of colonies killed by disease. CAN ELKHORN CORAL RECOVER? Until the 1970s, elkhorn corals were the primary reef builders in the Virgin Islands. Then, white band disease and storms caused extensive declines. At Buck Island Reef National Monument, where some of the largest elkhorn stands had been, live coral cover fell by 80 percent over two decades. In 1979, Hurricane David and Tropical Storm Frederic decimated elkhorn coral throughout the islands. Hurricanes Hugo in 1989 and Marilyn in 1995 caused further damage. Because elkhorn corals grow in very shallow water, they are very vulnerable to damage from hurricanes, snorkelers, and boats. In April 2002, a large ferryboat ran aground on Johnson’s Reef in Virgin Islands National Park, causing extensive damage to the elkhorn there. Today, throughout the Caribbean and Western Atlantic, elkhorn coral has been reduced to less than 10 percent of its former abundance. Scientists and volunteers from the U.S. Geological Survey, the National Park Service, the University of the Virgin Islands, and The Ocean Conservancy are working together on a new research project on elkhorn and staghorn corals in Virgin Islands National Park, Buck Island Reef National Monument, and Biscayne National Park in Florida. For most people, “endangered species” conjures images of pandas and tigers—animals that are more charismatic than hard, slimy corals. Yet both elkhorn and staghorn corals are now being considered for the U.S. Endangered Species List because of their dramatic decline from disease and storms in the last 15 to 25 years. No corals are currently on that list. So far, scientists have spent most of their time studying a reef in Haulover Bay—at one time one of the best elkhorn reefs around St. John. Researchers are mapping and photographing coral colonies; recording signs of damage from predators, disease, and snorkel31 Section2_PDF.qxd 10/15/04 3:17 PM Page 32 THE STATE OF THE REEFS ers; and sampling diseased coral tissue for pathogens. These colonies have exhibited surprising changes since scientists began to monitor them in February 2003. Several small colonies have died, even though many corals have shown rapid new growth. White pox disease has affected almost 75 percent of the colonies, but in some cases, the dead patches have healed. Coral-eating snails have caused tissue loss on some colonies. Branches have been broken off almost one-third of the colonies by snorkelers and fishing line. OTHER NEW RESEARCH TECHNOLOGIES Throughout the Islands, new technologies are helping us to understand how coral reef ecosystems function, and how people’s activities, both on land and in the water, affect those systems. Digital aerial photography has brought about the first complete set of marine habitat maps of the Islands. Along with maps of watershed boundaries and vegetation on land, these maps will be used to evaluate how land use affects undersea habitats. Sonar has been used to map deep shelf habitats below 60 feet. This work has uncovered extensive coral reefs in water deeper than 130 feet in the Marine Conservation District south of St. Thomas. Scientists are also using hand-held Global Positioning System devices to locate and measure the regrowth of elkhorn coral stands. Scientists from the University of the Virgin Islands and the National Park Service have been using nitrox diving equipment—with less nitrogen While no reefs have as many elkhorn corals as they did in the 1970s, many bays in the U.S. Virgin Islands and British Virgin Islands have new elkhorn colonies. Scientists can’t predict whether the reefs will recover entirely or not, but the signs are encouraging. Coral bleaching occurs when the number of zooxanthellae in the coral tissues decreases, or when the pigments of the zooxanthellae decrease, usually in response to high water temperature, high solar radiation, and calm seas. Global warming, El Niño, and changes in ocean circulation contribute to this phenomenon. To help predict environmental conditions that could lead to bleaching events, NOAA installed the Coral Reef Early Warning System (CREWS) on St. Croix. The CREWS oceanographic buoy—one of 20 to be installed at a variety of key sites in both the Caribbean and the Pacific—provides real-time data on atmospheric and oceanic conditions. Over the long term, these data may help scientists foresee when bleaching events could occur. PHOTO: DOUG PE R R I NE / SEAPICS.COM PREDICTING CORAL REEF BLEACHING EVENTS LEFT: Some fish, such as these Goliath groupers, come together at predictable times and places to spawn, which makes them especially vulnerable to overfishing. To promote healthy fish populations, it is vital to protect spawning areas from fishing. 32 3:17 PM Page 33 ABOVE: The Marine Conservation District at Red Hind Bank seeks to protect spawning habitat of red hind. than normal compressed air—to increase their time under water and to study areas deeper than 100 feet. The National Park Service is also using a sonar-based underwater locating system to randomly locate transects for long-term research on coral reefs in St. John and St. Croix. STUDYING HOW MARINE RESERVES AND PROTECTED AREAS BENEFIT REEF FISH Large reef fish, such as Nassau grouper and red hind, are important to coral reef ecosystems; as top predators, they help to keep those systems in balance. Yet these large fish are especially vulnerable to overfishing, because they gather each year for only a few days at a predictable place and time to spawn. Fishermen often know where and when these events occur, and in years past, they have responded by heavily fishing spawning aggregations. In the U.S. Virgin Islands, some local stocks were wiped out by intense fishing pressure on spawning aggregations. Researchers from the U.S. Virgin Islands Division of Fish and Wildlife and from the University of the Virgin Islands have been monitoring the recovery of red hind in the territory’s marine reserves and protected areas. Researchers documented the decline and subsequent recovery of red hind through 1997 following a seasonal closure in 1990 of a red hind spawning aggregation site. The Red Hind Bank is located seven miles south of St. Thomas, and in 1999 the Bank was designated a Marine Conservation District—an area permanently free from all fishing activity and anchoring. Since that time, scientists from the University of the Virgin Islands Center for Marine and Environmental Studies have documented dramatic increases in the size and biomass of red hind—or the volume (by weight) of fish within a specified area. Scientists from Jacksonville University and the Oceanic Institute have also found that designation of the Marine Conservation District led to immediate increases in the size of fish and in the number of male red hinds. (See figure on page 42.) conducted nightly beach patrols on Buck Island, collecting data critical to conserving hawksbills. They have studied hawksbills’ fidelity to seasonal nesting beaches, their migrations after nesting, inter-nesting behavior, how hurricanes have affected the turtles, and the sex ratio of hatchlings, or turtles that have just emerged from eggs. Park staff and visiting scientists have also studied the hawksbill population living in the coral reef that surrounds Buck Island, capturing juvenile turtles to determine sex, residency, growth rate, and feeding habits. The Ocean Conservancy and the Nature Conservancy have been working together to identify additional fish spawning aggregation sites to plan for future reserves and to better manage and protect local fish populations. PHOTO: ZAN DY H I LLIS-STAR R 10/15/04 PHOTO: CRAIG DAH LG R EN Section2_PDF.qxd SEA TURTLE RESEARCH AT BUCK ISLAND For nearly three decades, the U.S. National Park Service has monitored threatened and endangered sea turtles nesting at Buck Island Reef National Monument. Hawksbill turtles are the smallest and most endangered of the species that nest on Buck Island, and the U.S. Virgin Islands is one of few areas in the Caribbean to still have a nesting population of hawksbill turtles. Over the last 17 years, biologists and volunteers have ABOVE: A juvenile hawksbill turtle cruises a reef. Scientists at Buck Island Reef National Monument are studying the habits and biology of this endangered species. 33 10/15/04 3:17 PM P O I N T O F Page 34 guy benjamin, milton samuel, edmond roberts, fred samuel Guy Benjamin is the self-proclaimed “oldest person in the world.” He and three of his friends—Fred Samuel, owner of Fred’s Restaurant and Bar, Edmond Roberts, a third-generation fisherman retired from the National Park Service, and Milton Samuel, also retired from the Park Service—offered their thoughts about how things have changed in the waters of the Virgin Islands over the past several decades. GUY BENJAMIN: I grew up on the East Point of St. John. EDMOND ROBERTS: This was in the ’40s, ’50s, and early We used the sea for everything. We fished, we boated, we swam, we played and we worked. Talk about fishing! I started to fish with a pin and a roll of thread! ’60s, but we were still catching lobsters that way in the early ’70s. We’ve had a population explosion in these islands in the last 20 to 30 years. But in the mid ’70s, and prior to that, we didn’t even have to use a boat to go out and get lobsters. There’s a place in Coral Bay called Penn’s Point, and we would go right off that point right there and catch lobsters, as boys 12 or 13 years old, so the water must not have been more than eight to ten feet deep, and we were catching lobsters. There were no lobster regulations there. We would catch baby lobsters using a bent common pin and a piece of number 10 thread—we would have to sneak that out of the house when our mom wasn’t watching, but we would go and fish and we would cook them right there on the beach. Lobsters and fish, and whelks, and conch. We could just walk out and pick up queen conch! MILTON SAMUEL: I’ve been around quite a bit, and I’ve seen a lot of changes, and I don’t think some of the changes are good for the island. In my day as a kid growing up in Coral Bay, there were only two boats in the harbor, and nobody slept on those boats. They were only used for taking cargo back and forth between St. Thomas and St. John. But now there are thousands of boats in Coral Bay. Where is all the sewage going? And our government doesn’t do anything about it. GB: Milton, tell about the lobsters. How you and Edmond PHOTO: AR MAN DO J E N I K Section2_PDF.qxd and the rest of us used to get our lobsters. MS: Well, when we wanted a lobster, we just used to go out and dive for a lobster. We would just jump overboard, swim out there, and get lobsters. And that was close to the shore! ER: I remember that my father worked on the North Shore of St. John in the late 1950s. Over there the ocean floor looked black; there was such a tremendous concentration of 34 Section2_PDF.qxd 10/15/04 3:17 PM Page 35 minnows along those white sandy beaches. My father would take a hoop basket and dip it down in the water and pick up minnows—right there on the beach. The concentration of minnows was fascinating to me. I can remember seeing that black line of them, and I haven’t seen anything like that in recent years, and I don’t have any idea why. “How can we get man to think about others rather than himself alone– to understand that these resources are not his, but they belong to all of us, and to understand that we are all brothers and sisters?” —Guy Benjamin MS: The boats are also pumping oil and waste. We used to row our boats! In those days, they also used fish traps. But they didn’t want to put fish traps on the corals, because they would get snagged. Instead, they put traps in the browsing area, between the reef and the seagrass bed. This is where the fish come out at night and feed. Certain types of fish—some of the grunts, for example—spent much of their time in the seagrass, and so you would set the trap on the seagrass. But the last thing a fisherman wanted to do was to set his traps on the coral. PHOTO: N ICOLAS DRAYTON ER: And the pleasure yachts and cruise ships are using GB: So we didn’t kill the corals. We preserved the corals. And I remember that if we wanted a certain type of fish, we would even catch a lobster and put it in our fish pot! And we used to catch grouper—I know for sure—with lobster for bait! ER: Lobster and conch weren’t popular as food then. They were good bait. Recently, I’ve gone out snorkeling and I’ve seen lobsters under rocks, so I know there are still lobsters here. And I think that if they can protect the mangrove estuaries, they are very critical to lobster production. Those mangrove lagoons are very important to many other types of marine life, you know, various other types of shrimps and juvenile fish. GB: When we were growing up I would find so many LEFT TO RIGHT: Edmond Roberts, Guy Benjamin, and Milton Samuel. ER: But you don’t see many of them anymore. In one pond there were tons of mullet with the herons feeding on them. The ponds are very important because they are settling areas for runoff. All of these ponds have dried up or have become shallow, and the mangroves have disappeared. The salt ponds allowed the water settle before it got to the reef. There is a strong relationship between the ponds and the reefs. Today, there has been a dramatic decrease in the pelagic fish—the tuna and hard nose. I think they disappeared when the minnows disappeared. Was it because we were taking too many minnows or too many pelagics? I think the quality of the water has made the difference. Has the temperature of the water changed? I think we need more research to find out. anti fouling paints. No marine life can attach itself to this paint. But what happens when that stuff gets into our water? All these things play a part. I’m not saying that we shouldn’t have pleasure boats, but we need to be more careful. And the dramatic thing that I’ve seen here is the change in population. If we could reduce the population it would make a difference for the reefs and fish. MS: I agree. Also, I would charge the boaters for the use of all the conveniences. FRED SAMUEL: I’d change the living conditions. Too PHOTO: NICOLAS DRAYTON many people don’t have anything, and as long as that’s so, you will have problems. I would change working conditions. We’re recycling people: firing them and then rehiring them. We also need to give the younger people an opportunity to excel. GB: How can we get man to think about others rather than himself alone–to understand that these resources are not his, but they belong to all of us, and to understand that we are all brothers and sisters? mussels on the roots of the mangrove trees. 35 Section2_PDF.qxd 10/15/04 3:17 PM Page 36 Field Research Facilities in the U.S. Virgin Islands Virgin Islands Environmental Resource Station (VIERS) is located on the south coast of St. John. This facility was expanded in the fall of 1968 as a field camp for the Tektite project. When Tektite ended in 1970, the station was taken over by the College of the Virgin Islands, now the University of the Virgin Islands. Since then, VIERS has provided students and scientists with opportunities to study first-hand the connection between terrestrial habitats and the coral reefs offshore. Faculty and students from universities and institutions around the world conduct research programs in marine biology and tropical ecology at VIERS. The station also serves the local community, providing opportunities for environmental education field studies. The Virgin Islands Environmental Resource Station provides a place for students and researchers from all over the world to conduct field studies in marine biology and tropical ecology. RIGHT: PHOTOS: STE PHAN IE WEAR In 1971, Fairleigh Dickinson University established the West Indies Laboratory at Tague Bay, on the east end of St. Croix. But in 1989, Hurricane Hugo destroyed the laboratory and its small fleet, forcing it to close. Nevertheless, over its 18 years of existence, the laboratory generated nearly 250 scientific papers. Scientists working at the St. Croix laboratory helped further our understanding of fish recruitment patterns, habitat selection, how coral reef fishes mate, and what factors influence reef fish assemblages. They also documented the effects of white band disease on elkhorn coral on the barrier reef at Buck Island. 36 Section2_PDF.qxd 10/15/04 3:17 PM Page 37 Reef Fish and Fisheries in the U.S. Virgin Islands The coral reef ecosystems of the U.S. Virgin Islands provide habitat, food, and shelter for a great diversity of reef fish. More than 300 shallowwater reef fish have been identified in the region. The fisheries in the U.S. Caribbean are multi-species, multi-gear, artisanal in nature and principally coral reef-based. Commercial and recreational fishermen target approximately 180 species. There are some 380 registered commercial fishermen in the U.S. Virgin Islands. The commercial fishing fleet consists primarily of small, open, wood or fiberglass fishing boats. The fishing methods used include trap, net, and line fishing, and diving. Fish traps—known as “pots”—are the most popular gear. Pots are generally constructed of wire mesh with a rigid wooden or metal frame. Depending on bottom conditions, traps may be set singly, or in “strings,” with multiple traps connected by a single line. Trap strings or individual traps may or may not have buoys attached. Traps must be inspected for compliance with mesh size regulations and biodegradable escape panels and door fastenings. Once it has passed inspection, each trap is tagged with an owner identification number. Line fishing is the second most popular fishing method, and the only gear used to catch pelagic fishes, or those that frequent the open ocean. Fishermen use hand lines, rod and reels, and electric or hydraulic reels to troll—or fish near the surface—for open-ocean fishes and to bottom fish for shallow water reef fishes and deepwater snappers and groupers. Fishermen also use haul and purse seines, beach seines, gill nets, and trammel nets made with monofilament or nylon line. Umbrella nets and cast nets are typically used to harvest baitfish. Scuba and free diving are used to spear fish and harvest conch, lobster, and whelk, and also to set and work nets. Because the shelf surrounding the islands is narrow, fishermen often catch both reef and open-ocean fishes during a single daily trip. Offshore fisheries mainly target six species from the tuna-mackerel (Scombridae) family and dolphin fish (Coryphaenidae) family. Recreational fishermen are not required to have a license or permit in the U.S. Virgin Islands, except PHOTO: HEN RY TONNEMACH E R THE STATE OF THE REEFS ABOVE: Fish traps, or “pots” are the most popular fishing gear among commercial fishermen in the Virgin Islands. for those who engage in shrimp fishing and bait fishing with cast nets in specified areas. As a result, the exact number of recreational fishermen is unknown. However, a telephone survey conducted in 2000 by the Eastern Caribbean Center estimated the number of boat-based recreational fishermen to be 2,509. The number of boat-based and shore-based anglers combined was estimated to be around 11,000, or about 9.2 percent of the population. Among recreational fishermen, trolling was reported to be the most common boat-based fishing method, followed by bottom fishing. Approximately half of all recreational fishing occurs in territorial waters, within three miles from shore. According to surveys, the most abundant catch was snapper, followed by dolphin and tuna. The 563 recreational shoreline anglers interviewed in the U.S. Virgin Islands between 1995 and 1998 reported catching French grunts most frequently, followed by jacks and yellowtail snappers. 37 Section2_PDF.qxd T H E 10/15/04 3:17 PM S T A T E O F Page 38 T H E R E E F S Who manages our fish? Historical overfishing in the Virgin Islands has depleted Nassau groupers. Although territorial regulations prohibit fishing for Nassau groupers, the population has not increased sufficiently to form spawning aggregations (like this one in Belize). BELOW: In federal waters—from three to 200 nautical miles offshore—regional councils manage fisheries resources (fish, conch, lobster, corals) through fishery management plans. The Caribbean Fishery Management Council is responsible for fisheries resources in federal waters around Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. The Shallow Water Reef Fish Management Plan includes 64 of the most commonly landed fish species from 14 families, which compose the bulk of the catch from Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. This management plan also includes aquarium trade species; prohibits harvest of Goliath and Nassau groupers and butterfly fishes; places size limits on yellowtail snappers and queen conchs; and enacts closures and gear restrictions. PHOTO: DOUG PE R R I NE / SEAPICS.COM The Government of the Virgin Islands has jurisdiction over the marine resources in territorial waters, which extend from the shoreline out to three nautical miles. The Commissioner of the Department of Planning and Natural Resources enacts fisheries management regulations, and local fisheries advisory committees make recommendations to the commissioner on how to conserve these resources. The U.S. National Park Service manages waters under its jurisdiction. Traditional fishing is allowed in the National Park, but it is largely prohibited in the National Monuments. 38 Section2_PDF.qxd 10/15/04 3:17 PM Page 39 The State of Reef Fish in the U.S. Virgin Islands In 1991, the National Marine Fisheries Service funded a stock assessment for shallow water reef fish of the U.S. Caribbean. For the U.S. Virgin Islands, the news was not good. The study found that the size of numerous fish—parrotfishes, grunts, surgeonfishes, trunkfishes and queen triggerfishes—had decreased over time. Large groupers, once the most commercially important fish, were absent from the fishery. Only two smaller grouper species, red hind and coney, were common. However, red hind recruitment—or the number of young fish entering the population each year—was poor. To improve the fish stocks, the scientists recommended that managers should: (1) ensure that federal and territorial waters were governed by compatible regulations; (2) reduce fishing on small fishes; (3) protect spawning aggregations; (4) improve compliance with minimum size and other regulations; (5) increase fish trap mesh size to two inches as soon as possible; (6) establish additional marine reserves, and (7) collect more biological information on fish. Another National Marine Fisheries Service report on St. Croix fisheries from 1997 through 2000 showed further evidence of overfishing and depleted resources. It indicated a 10 percent decrease in the average weight of reef fish and a 12 percent decrease in the average weight of lobster. The mean number of fish per trap haul and the weight of fish per trap haul decreased by 40 and 47 percent, respectively. PHOTO: N ICOLAS DRAYTON Spawning aggregations are precise areas where fish come together to spawn at a specific time. Since the 1960s, fishermen in the U.S. Virgin Islands have targeted seasonal spawning aggregations of large groupers and snappers. The continuous and unregulated fishing pressure during spawning resulted in the demise of large, slow-growing, territorial species like Nassau groupers, yellowfin groupers, and Goliath groupers to the point where they no longer form aggregations to spawn. Such fish are now quite rare, and in some cases, fisheries extinct, meaning very few of them appear in the fishery. In federal waters, fishing for Nassau groupers has been prohibited since 1985. Nevertheless, illegal fishing activities and the lack of compatible territorial regulations have prevented those fish populations from increasing sufficiently to allow spawning aggregations to reform. 38 10/15/04 3:17 PM P O I N T O F Page 40 olasee davis Olasee Davis is Natural Resources Extension Specialist at the University of the Virgin Islands, a local historian, and a native of the Islands. For The State of the Reefs, Olasee interviewed a number of fishermen and fisherwomen on the island of St. Croix about how fishing has changed over the years and why. Here is what they told him. WHAT FISHERMEN SAY When I first began my interviews among the St. Croix fishing community, most did not want to talk. The fishermen believed that the government—federal and local—was taking away their traditional rights to make a living. But when I explained to them that I wanted their opinions for a book, they began to open up. While I was at the lagoon in Gallows Bay, I spoke to two women about fishing on St. Croix. “From the 1940s to the ’60s, conch and lobster used to be all along the shore,” they told me. “The seagrass bed along the coast of Gallows Bay used to have thousands of conch and lobster.” They used to walk right into the water and select which conch and lobster they wanted. PHOTO: J UAN AR MAN DO SANCH E Z Section2_PDF.qxd Other fishermen echoed these memories. “There were so many lobsters and conchs in the seagrass beds along the shore that there were more lobsters and conchs than seagrass," one recalled. The Easter holidays were a time for traditional catching of conch, lobster, and other fish among the rocks along the shore. “There were always plenty of fish to eat and share with friends,” said one. Many old fishermen and fisherwomen used to catch fish by walking out to the reef. In those days, they say, you could choose which fish you wanted because they were so abundant. But this practice stopped in areas such as the Krause Lagoon on the south shore of the island, because the building of an industrial complex nearby destroyed much of the underwater habitat. The practice continued into the late 1960s and ’70s at Great Pond Bay, Spring Bay, and other inlets or bays east of the Krause Lagoon, but as fish have continued to decline, it has stopped almost entirely. All of the St. Croix fishermen and fisherwomen I spoke with agreed that the stocks and abundance of fishes have changed over the years. When I asked why fish have declined in the Virgin Islands, people cited a wide variety of reasons. Some seemed to feel that pollution was responsible; “It’s 40 Section2_PDF.qxd 10/15/04 3:17 PM Page 41 “The traditional ethic of taking only what you need from the sea has been lost.” —anonymous St. Croix fisherman Still others pointed to the loss of habitat. The decline of mangroves—habitat on which the reef fishes depend— was another reason cited. Several fishermen argued that greed and the loss of an environmental ethic among the people was an important contributor to the decline in fish. One person said, “too many fishermen are catching fish.” Another noted that people are catching too many small fishes—before they’ve reached maturity—and they are not throwing them back into the water. “Nowadays, you fish for long hours and get smaller fishes because of greedy so-called fishermen who catch everything including the small fishes," one person said. One St. Croix fisherman stated that he changed his method of fishing from fish pots to line fishing "because other individuals steal my fish pot. These so-called fishermen open up your fish pot and take your fish. They even go with your fish pot." “The traditional ethic of taking only what you need from the sea has been lost,” said one. “Everyone for himself,” said another. I then asked why fishermen were engaged in these harmful practices. Most agreed that self-interest was involved: “These so-called fishermen are greedy. They don't care about the baby fishes getting a chance to grow up," said one person. "Money comes first," said another. "They don't think on the resources," said a third. Another fisherman said that because things are expensive, “some so-called fishermen catch everything in sight to sell to make a living because buying a boat, engines, or whatever they need for the boat is expensive.” Whether or not they are catching too many or too small fish, most had no problem selling their fish. Some fish sold on the roadside might cost an "arm and a leg," but fishermen are still able to sell them because people are looking for fresh fish to buy. During my interviews, one thing was clear; among fishermen, the term “overfishing” is a bad word. They don't like to hear it. Some said that overfishing was the result of individuals who don't depend on fishing for their living, or of those who don't care about the resources. PHOTO: N ICOLAS DRAYTON because of coastal development and too many houses being built near the sea. Dirt is destroying the fishing grounds.” Others mentioned that raw sewage and pollution from the oil refinery or other industrial complexes along the shore are destroying the fish. 41 Section2_PDF.qxd T H E 10/15/04 S T A T E 3:17 PM O F Page 42 T H E R E E F S Why are reef fish declining? The balance of nature that sustains reef fish is complex and delicately intertwined at all levels. Man and nature can easily upset this balance. PHOTO: N ICOLAS DRAYTON POOR FISHING PRACTICES Many commercial fishermen recognize that they are catching fewer—and smaller—fish, lobster, and conch. And today, they have to travel farther from shore and fish in deeper water than they used to. Recognizing that their livelihoods depend on healthy fish populations, some fishermen have taken an active role in fish management by serving on local fisheries advisory committees or Caribbean Fishery Management Council committees. Numerous recommendations made by fishermen have been drafted into regulations in the Virgin Islands. But unsound fishing practices, such as targeting spawning aggregations when the fish are most vulnerable, take many years to reverse. As fish become scarcer, fishermen rely on more advanced fishing gear and innovations to sustain their catches. In the early 1970s, for example, fishermen began to use scuba gear to harvest conch, lobster, and fish. As inshore fish were depleted, fishermen turned their efforts offshore. Scuba gear also began to be used in fishing with gill and trammel nets. This method allowed the nets to be set in deeper water along daily migration pathways of parrotfish from inshore feeding grounds to offshore resting grounds. Using this method, fishermen could remove an entire school of parrotfish in one set. In addition, protected species such as butterfly fish and federally listed endangered or protected sea turtles were also caught incidentally. If the nets were not carefully removed, they uprooted corals, sea fans and sea whips, sponges, and other organisms. Herbivorous, or plant-eating, fish, such as parrotfish, spoil quickly. Over-harvesting and the inability to chill and adequately store large quantities of such fish results in wanton waste. Parrotfish are also one of the major “grazers” on coral reefs. They help to keep the algae in check, which allows coral larvae a better chance to settle and become established. Removing too many parrotfish, then, can have a serious impact on the health of the reef itself. Commercial fishermen have lost many traps in hurricanes. Although Virgin Islands regulations require traps to be inspected before they are used, compliance and enforcement are weak. Many fish traps in the Virgin Islands lack the required biodegradable escape panel and door fastenings that would allow fish to escape when traps are lost or can’t be hauled. Once lost, traps continue “ghost fishing”—or trapping and killing fish for years—until they disintegrate or fall apart. Unable to obtain loans or federal grants to replace this gear and reluctant to sustain additional losses, many fishermen on St. Croix changed over to fishing with nets. With gill and trammel nets, they could catch more fish in a shorter period of time. Scuba gear is also used to fish deep-water purse seine nets—up to 3,000 feet long and 100 feet deep—to target large schools of jacks. Several thousand pounds of jacks may be caught in one set. Heavy weights on the bottom of the nets can damage corals and other organisms when the net is pursed, or closed. 42 Section2_PDF.qxd 10/15/04 3:17 PM Page 43 Coastal development can cause enormous changes in the health of underwater ecosystems. Uncontrolled building increases sediment runoff that can smother corals and other marine life. RIGHT: PHOTO: BAR RY DEVI NE Similarly, fishermen still use beach haul seines of over 1,000 feet in length in shallow, inshore waters. As fishermen retrieve seine nets from the beach, they drag them across the bottom, often harming or dislodging organisms living there. Although the nets are supposed to be pursed in the water, most are hauled onto sand, where unwanted fish are discarded. The coastal areas of the U.S. Virgin Islands contain extensive mangrove, seagrass, and coral reef habitats. These areas are nursery grounds for important reef fish and invertebrate species. The fish that commercial fishermen target have been largely depleted in these inshore areas; as a result, commercial fishermen no longer fish there. But recreational fishermen continue to fish these areas, often catching juvenile reef fish, conch and lobster that have not had the chance to develop or reproduce, and putting additional stress on fish populations. NATURAL DISASTERS Over the past two decades, several major hurricanes— Hugo (1989), Marilyn (1995), Georges (1998) and Lenny (1999)—affected the coral reefs, mangroves, and seagrass beds. Coral reefs in many areas were reduced to rubble, mangrove forests were damaged, and seagrass beds were covered with sand or severely eroded with blowouts—areas where the seagrass and rhizome root systems were washed away. Many coral colonies that survived the hurricanes have been severely impacted by coral diseases and increases in algal growth. A Caribbean-wide die-off of the longspined, black sea urchin (Diadema antillarum) occurred in 1983. This sea urchin was another major grazer on the coral reefs, helping to keep the algal growth in check. All of these events have contributed to the loss of, or change in, fish habitat. COASTAL DEVELOPMENT, HABITAT LOSS, AND DECLINING WATER QUALITY Coastal development for private homes, hotels and tourist facilities, marinas and industrial facilities has destroyed important nursery habitat for many valuable finfish and shellfish. Coastal mangrove communities have been, and continue to be, the most seriously affected. Sediment runoff, industrial discharges— including rum effluent, sewage, and leaching from landfills—and dredging has impaired water quality, particularly near the shore. These practices have made traditional nursery habitats inhospitable to fish, lobsters, and conchs. 43 Section2_PDF.qxd 10/15/04 G I V I N G F I S H 3:17 PM A Page 44 B R E A K Scientists have long known that marine reserves—areas protected from fishing and other extractive uses—can benefit fish populations, increasing the size and abundance of fish. USVI researchers have discovered that the Marine Conservation District at Red Hind Bank has helped to increase the size of red hind, both inside and around the marine reserve. As this chart shows, after 14 years of protection from fishing, red hind, which migrate to spawn within the reserve, increased, on average, by eight centimeters— or more than three inches—in length. Scientists also discovered that the average size of red hind caught by the St. Thomas fishery (port) increased during the same period. This study confirms that protecting fish spawning aggregations with marine reserves can extend benefits to ocean areas beyond their borders. 31 cm total length 1990 St. Thomas reserve 39 cm total length 30 cm total length 2004 2004 pressures of fishing. They can also help to preserve the balance of ecosystems that sustain fish and other marine life. SETTING LIMITS Recognizing that overfishing was a serious problem, in 2001, the Fisheries Advisory Committees in the U.S. Virgin Islands recommended that no new commercial fishing licenses be issued. A moratorium on new licenses went into effect in August of that year. The Fishery Advisory Committees are currently working on a licensing program that would give greater identity to commercial fishermen, limit entry into the fishery, restrict the use of certain types of gear, update regulations, establish new license fees, and develop a recreational license to help measure the scope and impacts of recreational fishing. The Advisory Committee on St. Croix has also recommended that bottom gill and trammel nets be banned. Other Committee recommendations that have come to fruition include seasonal closures to protect spawning aggregations of red hind and mutton snapper in the territory, seasonal closures and size and bag limits for conch, and establishing marine reserves—including no-take areas, or areas free from fishing—on the east end of St. Croix. ESTABLISHING MARINE RESERVES, TERRITORIAL PARKS, AND NATIONAL MONUMENTS 1992 St. Thomas port 34.5 cm total length Conserving Reef Fish Marine reserves have been recognized as valuable tools for conserving fish, because they provide fish with places to spawn, grow, and live apart from the CHART SOURCE: DR. RICHARD NEMETH, NOAA FISHERIES, AND THE In 2002, the government of the Virgin Islands designated the first territorial park: East End Marine Park on St. Croix. Most of the Park’s inshore waters have been designated a reserve or no-take zone. The U.S. Virgin Islands has also established several areas where fishing is restricted: CasCay/Mangrove Lagoon and St. James Marine Reserves on St. Thomas. Regulations are pending for Salt River Marine Reserve and Wildlife Sanctuary. Under interim regulations, the National Park Service prohibits fishing or removing marine life within Virgin Islands Coral Reef National Monument off St. John and Buck Island Reef National Monument off St. Croix. SPAWNING AREA AND SEASONAL CLOSURES The Caribbean Fishery Management Council has established seasonal spawning area closures in federal waters for red hind off the south coast of St. Thomas and off the east end of St. Croix (Lang Bank) during the months of December, January, and February. A joint territorial-federal spawning area closure has also been established for mutton snapper off the southeast coast of St. Croix from March through June of each year. A year-round closure, the Marine Conservation District, has been established off St. Thomas. No fishing is permitted within the closed area. Federal authorities have established annual seasonal closures for conch during the months of July, August, and September to complement regulations in territorial waters. U.S. VIRGIN ISLAND DIVISION OF FISH AND WILDLIFE. 44 Section2_PDF.qxd 10/15/04 3:17 PM Page 45 Tortola BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS Virgin Islands National Park MANAGING FISHING PRESSURE Charlotte Amalie Cruz Bay St. John Cas Cay/Mangrove Marine Reserve and Wildlife Sanctuary Virgin Islands Coral Reef National Monument N Red Hind Bank Marine Conservation District E W S Marine protected areas in the U.S. Virgin Islands Island Area in square miles 18˚ St. Croix St. John St. Thomas 0 0 84 20 32 Miles Kilometers 15 15 Buck Island Reef National Monument Buck Island Christiansted Frederiksted St. Croi x 17˚40'N 64˚40'W East End Marine Park 65˚ Under the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Management and Conservation Act—the law that regulates U.S. fish and fisheries—the fisheries councils are required to describe and identify Essential Fish Habitat—or habitat areas that are critical to the species’ ability to reproduce and thrive. The councils must also identify actions needed to conserve and enhance habitat, and to minimize any adverse effects of fishing on habitat. The Caribbean Fishery Management Council is currently completing an environmental impact statement, which contains alternatives for limiting habitat damage from fishing and reducing overall fishing effort by 30 percent in federal waters. Before they are finally adopted, these alternatives will be reviewed, presented, and discussed at public meetings. St. Thomas 18˚20' MAP: J E ROM E COOKSON / DATA: U NIVE R SITY OF TH E VI RG IN ISLAN DS CONSERVATION DATA CENTE R AN D U.S. NATIONAL PAR K SERVICE To reduce fishing pressure on depleted inshore reef fish, the government of the Virgin Islands has installed fish aggregating devices in offshore waters. These devices are intended to redirect effort to fish such as tuna, dolphin, and wahoo. These fish buoys are 58-inchdiameter steel spheres, mounted with a radar reflector and strobe light and anchored in water up to one mile in depth. They attract small baitfish and juvenile tunas, which in turn attract larger fish. The program has proven very effective in attracting open-ocean fish to specific areas. 45 Section2_PDF.qxd T H E 10/15/04 S TAT E 3:17 PM O F T H E Page 46 R E E F S Fisheries Challenges Still, conserving reef fish is not simply the responsibility of government; it is the responsibility of everyone—fishermen, consumers, divers, and all those who use or affect the coral reef ecosystems. Managers and decision makers have a responsibility to make informed decisions based on the best available science. But citizens, too, have a right—and a responsibility—to speak out on fishery management decisions. We must all recognize our responsibility to conserve and manage our marine resources so that successive generations of Virgin Islanders can experience, appreciate, and enjoy them. PHOTO: N ICOLAS DRAYTON The creation of marine reserves and territorial parks, seasonal closed areas for spawning aggregations, and the expansion of national monuments has dramatically reduced the fishable waters of the U.S. Virgin Islands. Areas where development or industrial impacts have degraded water quality have reduced these areas even more. As a result, there are now too many fishermen for the limited resources available. As the fishable areas have decreased, competition for the fish available in those limited areas has increased. Many good management regulations exist to protect our reef fish resources, but the ability to enforce these regulations is lacking. 46