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Thursday, May 2, 2024 82° Today's Paper


Hawaii News

Coral calamity

Marcel Honoré
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COURTESY UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII
Coral in the area of the Honolulu Harbor molasses spill is already dead, and University of Hawaii researchers say more will perish in the next few days.
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COURTESY UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII
The die-off of creatures such as the eel at left was so rapid that Robert Richmond, a UH research professor, suggested some of them may have succumbed to “osmotic pressure,” in which breathing water tainted by molasses caused the cells in their gills to collapse.
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COURTESY UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII
University of Hawaii researchers diving on Thursday in the molasses spill area found hundreds of dead rice and lace coral heads, bleached white instead of their usual tan or chocolate color.
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COURTESY UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII
UH officials will meet Monday with representatives of state and federal agencies, including the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, to discuss ways to protect the coral that remains.
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COURTESY UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII
UH officials will meet Monday with representatives of state and federal agencies, including the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, to discuss ways to protect the coral that remains.