. Earth Science News .
Japan Plants Coral To Save Sinking Territory

This picture taken in 1988 shows the rocky isles of Okinotori, 1,700km south of Tokyo as the southernmost point of its territory. Japan has begun planting baby coral on a remote Pacific atoll in a multi-million-dollar project, 18 June 2007 to save sinking islets and defend a territorial claim disputed with China. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) June 18, 2007
Japan has begun planting baby coral on a remote Pacific atoll in a multi-million-dollar project to save sinking islets and defend a territorial claim disputed with China, officials said Monday. Japan regards the rocky isles of Okinotori, 1,700 kilometres (1,060 miles) south of Tokyo, as the southernmost point of its territory, letting it set its 200-nautical-mile exclusive economic zone around them.

Teams will take several plants of juvenile coral to near the uninhabited isles this month after implanting six others in May, said fisheries expert Noboru Ishioka.

"We will watch the results ... though it is difficult to look frequently as a voyage takes three-and-a-half days," said Ishioka, chief researcher at Fisheries Infrastructure Development Centre.

"We hope to plant tens of thousands of them from this year on," he said.

His public corporation was partially tasked with the coral-growing project by the government's Fisheries Agency.

Japan has put aside some 500 million yen (four million dollars) for the project over the two years to March 2008, according to the Fisheries Agency.

The project was launched to "grow coral and protect national land," said an agency official who declined to be named.

But another official, Akito Sato, who is in charge of the project at the agency, said Japan "cannot rule out the possibility that rising water would cover the islands," due to global warming.

"We can use coral as a means to ward off the submergence," he said, adding another reason was to protect the environment on the atoll.

Also known as Douglas Reef, the atoll, about 11 kilometres (seven miles) in circumference, has been extensively eroded by waves. Only several square metres on the tops of the two rocks, which are reinforced by concrete, remain above surface at high tide.

China has insisted Okinotori is just rocks and thus is not regarded under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea as an entity around which Japan can set its 200-nautical-mile exclusive economic zone.

Source: Agence France-Presse

Email This Article

Related Links
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Toxic Algae Pose New Health Scare In China
Beijing (AFP) June 17, 2007
Two of China's biggest lakes are under renewed attack from toxic algae that destroy plant and fish life and threaten humans in the country's latest pollution scare, state media reported on Sunday. New satellite pictures of eastern China show the blue-green foul-smelling algae spreading in Taihu and Chaohu lakes, the Workers Daily newspaper said.







  • Contract Signed For Building Of GMES Sentinel-1 Satellite
  • NOAA Satellites Ready For Active Hurricane Season
  • Hurricane Blows Hispanic Workers Back To New Orleans
  • Locals Block Work At Indonesian Mud Volcano

  • Climate Models Consistent With Ocean Warming Observations
  • UN Secretary General Points To Climate Change As Partly Behind Darfur Disaster
  • World Desertification Day Puts Spotlight On Neglected Crisis
  • New Oak Ridge Theory Aims To Explain Recent Temperature And Climate Extremes

  • Ukraine To Launch Earth Observation Satellite In 2008
  • NASA Satellites Watch as China Constructs Giant Dam
  • Kalam Calls For Development Of Satellite Systems For Entire Humanity
  • Boeing Launches Italian Earth Observation Satellite

  • US Agricultural Carbon Offset Program Will Capture And Destroy Methane From 200 Farms
  • GE Energy Advances Its Cleaner Coal Solutions For Low Rank Coals
  • Pending Tax Credit Will Make Commercial Solar Systems A Financial Reality In Oregon
  • Researchers Examine Carbon Capture And Storage To Combat Global Warming

  • Bono And Geldof blast G8 AIDS Pledge Farce
  • US Firm To Trial Bird Flu Vaccine In Indonesia And Hong Kong
  • Avian Influenza Survivor Antibodies Effective At Neutralising H5N1 Strain
  • System To Pinpoint Airline Passengers Who Contaminate Cabins

  • Book Makes Case For Using Evolution In Everyday Life
  • Ancient DNA Traces The Woolly Mammoth Disappearance
  • CT Scan Reveals Ancient Long-Necked Gliding Reptile
  • Study Shows Lizard Moms Dress Their Children For Success

  • Hewlett-Packard E-Cyclers Are Gold Miners Of The Internet-Age
  • Beijing Chokes On Illegal Straw Burning While Hong Kong Waters Drown In Rubbish
  • Chinese Premier Wants Action On Taihu Lake Pollution
  • US Loses Landmark Supreme Court Environmental Case

  • The High Cost Of The Beijing Olympics
  • Highway System Drives City Population Declines
  • The Global Impact Of Cities
  • New Findings Challenge Established Views About Human Genome

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement