Saving Coral…Through Sperm Banks?
Marine biologist Mary Hagedorn has learned to freeze and reanimate coral cells
- Smithsonian.com, September 15, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Hagedorn is working on expanding her Hawaiian bank to include sperm and embryonic cells from rice coral, a species that is prone to disease and bleaching. For two weeks in August, she visited Smithsonian’s Carrie Bow Cay Marine Laboratory in Belize to bank endangered staghorn coral. “Now is the time to be collecting,” says Hagedorn, while there is still a lot of genetic diversity in the ocean’s coral. “Not 20 years from now when populations may have collapsed even further.” Come November, Hagedorn and the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, in partnership with the Australian Institute of Marine Science, Sydney’s Taronga Zoo and others, will create a frozen sperm bank for two main coral species from the Great Barrier Reef.
Nancy Knowlton, a renowned coral reef biologist and the Smithsonian’s Sant chair of marine science at the Natural History Museum, agrees with Hagedorn that scientists should be using what tools they have to mitigate coral loss. Cryopreservation, she says, is a “very important tool in the tool box.”
“Corals normally spawn and reproduce, and they don’t need us to assist them,” says Knowlton. “But given the precarious state of reefs around the planet, it may well be that for some species, especially rare species, we are going to need to draw on these cryopreserved banks to make sure that they don’t go extinct.”
Hagedorn is working to develop other tools as well, honing a method of freezing small, one- to two-millimeter fragments of corals. In addition to reproducing sexually, coral can reproduce asexually—if a piece breaks off, it can take root in the sea floor and start a new colony. “Upon thawing, these small adults could be glued down and possibly become reproductive within years,” says Hagedorn. She is also an advocate for raising coral larvae in aquariums around the world. In Curacao, a group of scientists with SECORE, a coral consortium founded in 2002 that Hagedorn is a member of, is experimenting with rearing corals in a semi-natural environment, piping in water from a reef so that the young corals are exposed to the pathogens and temperature swings of the wild, without the predators.
Of course, cryopreservation and coral restoration must go hand in hand with working to improve the health of wild ecosystems. “It doesn’t do any good to put nice little juvenile corals that you have raised up from eggs and sperm out in the field if the conditions that killed the corals to begin with are still prevailing,” says Knowlton.
Hagedorn would ultimately like to see coral cell cryopreservation carried out on a global scale. “She’s taught me a lot about having passion for what you do, and having perseverance to stick it out and continue on with things you believe in,” says Ginnie Carter, a biotechnician in Hagedorn’s lab.
“If we lose our coral reefs, it will be the first ecosystem that we have lost while man is alive. It will be on our watch and most of it due to us. I don’t think that is acceptable,” says Hagedorn. She takes seriously the need for people to feel a personal responsibility to take care of the earth. “For me, my contribution is coral,” she says.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments