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margara
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July 28, 2006 |
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Press Contact:
Craig Lilyestrom, Director
Marine Resources Division
Dept. of Natural and Environmental Resources
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico
Tel: (787) 999-2200 x2615
Fax: (787) 724-0365
Email: craig@caribe.net |
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July 24, 2006 (San Juan, PR) ? The
Department of Natural and Environmental Resources (DNER) for the Commonwealth
of Puerto Rico today announced that significant progress has been made
in the cooperative efforts among various agencies and the party responsible
for the Tanker Vessel Margara grounding to stabilize and restore corals damaged by the
T/V Magara oil tanker grounding last April. |
In early May, DNER entered into a cooperative effort with the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and Independent Maritime Consulting, Ltd (IMC), representatives of the responsible party, to
conduct immediate emergency restoration measures to save and restore coral reefs located off Guayanilla Bay, Puerto Rico, that were
damaged by the T/V Margara oil tanker grounding. T/V Margara, a 748-foot Cayman Island flagged vessel, loaded with over 300,000
barrels of fuel oil, while en route from Cartagena, Colombia to Tallaboa, Puerto Rico ran aground on April 27, 2006, approximately
two miles off the region of Guayanilla, on the southwestern coast of Puerto Rico. While the ship was re-floated approximately
twenty-three hours later, the grounding did result in a loss of substantial and diverse coral reef habitat. |
?We are pleased
to report that due in large part to excellent and unprecedented cooperation
between the trustees and the responsible party, we have seen significant
progress in stabilizing injured corals,? said Craig Lilyestrom, Director
of Marine Resources Division, DNER. ?We are underway with a significant
effort to quantify and restore corals within the impacted area. We are
confident that we will be able to achieve restoration of many of the
important species that were damaged.? |
With the assistance
of NOAA, DNER is monitoring the responsible party?s restoration efforts
and has built a team of resource experts to assist in this project,
including technical assistance and field support from Lighthouse Technical
Consulting Incorporated. |
Coral reefs are an important natural resource for fostering fish habitat,
ensuring marine biodiversity, and for recreational use. Certain coral species are considered endangered or threatened by both human
and climatological impacts. Both Elkhorn coral (Acropora palmata) and Staghorn coral (Acropora cervicornis) were recently
listed as threatened species under the Endangered Species Act. |
Because the grounding occurred in state waters, The Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico has directed DNER to assume the lead administrative Trustee (LAT) role in the natural resource damage assessment for this grounding
incident. NOAA has agreed to participate as co-trustee. |
At this time, emergency restoration efforts are multi-faceted, but focus on
removing ship bottom paint from the seafloor, coral reattachment, and coral rubble stabilization. |
?We are grateful
for the support we have received from the responsible party and NOAA,
as well as the coordinated effort to date that has brought the best
in expert assistance to bear on this important emergency restoration
effort,? said Hon. Javier Velez Arocho, Secretary of DNER. |
About DNER-Puerto Rico
The Department of Natural and Environmental Resources of Puerto Rico (DNER) is responsible for the management of 25 areas with marine
components including Natural Reserves, a Commonwealth Forest and a Marine Reserve. The Natural and Marine Reserves are managed by the
Natural Reserves and Commonwealth Forests Divisions of the Bureau of Reserves, Refuges, and Coastal Resources of DNER. Through the
passage of Puerto Rican Law 147 (Coral Reef Conservation Act of 1999), the Commonwealth has elevated the concern for and protection of
coral reefs as a natural and protected resource, vital to sustaining fish and biodiversity within state waters. |
About NOAA
NOAA, an agency of the U.S. Department of Commerce, is dedicated to enhancing
economic security and national safety through the prediction and research
of weather and climate-related events and providing environmental stewardship
of our nation?s coastal and marine resources. NOAA?s Southeastern Damage
Assessment and Restoration Centers, based in St. Petersburg, Florida, have
been activated to assist in natural resource damage assessment and reef restoration
projects throughout the region. In recent years, NOAA has assisted Puerto
Rico in the basic assessment of coral reef resources, as called for in the
U.S. Coral Reef Task Force Action Plan and the Coral Reef Conservation Act
of 2000. Other projects include: conducting habitat mapping of the western
shelf of Puerto Rico, assessing the status of reef resources, and assessing
fishery impacts. |
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