Artificial reef creates fine home for kelp
I’m responding to an Aug. 10 article discussing results from a
survey of city planners’ opinions of the California Coastal
Commission (“Survey reveals mixed opinion of commission”). The
article closed with a negative quote describing work of the Marine
Forests Society as a “garbage dump.” Presumably the quotation
included and referred to the society’s artificial reef constructed
from used automobile tires.
Waste materials have also been employed by other groups for
constructing artificial reefs. Waste materials, for example, have
been used by the California Department of Fish and Game in some of
the artificial reefs they have deployed along our shores. A critical
aspect in such usage is whether the materials are likely to
contribute significant toxicity to their nearby surroundings.
Toxicity assessment can be a difficult task in the ebb and flow
environments along most shallow ocean floors. The ultimate proof of
the pudding is whether marine organisms closely and successfully
associate with such structures.
I have not directly seen the tire reef deployed by the society
because I gave up scuba diving in the mid-1990s. I have, however,
examined many photographs of the aggregate. The Marine Forests
Society requested my assistance in identifying genera and species of
organisms closely associated with their reef. The reef clearly now
supports a diverse group of plants and animals commonly found on
nearby natural reefs. The tires appear to be stable, and the overall
structure has persisted for several years. Is it really a dump? Tough
question. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. If I were a kelp
spore, my answer would be something like: “This is it, there’s no
place like home.”
WHEELER J. NORTH
Costa Mesa
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Wheeler J. North is a Caltech emeritus professor
of environmental science whose contributions to kelp research led to
the dubbing of an aquaculture test site near Crystal Cove as
Wheeler’s Reef.
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