| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
James Cook University scientists in Australia have made a breakthrough in the war against a deadly enemy of the Great Barrier Reef. The Crown of Thorns Starfish (CoTS) are breeding at epidemic1 levels and are one of the primary reasons for the decline in live coral.
But a new paper shows injecting the coral-eating pest with simple household vinegar kills it just as effectively as the current drug, which can be expensive and difficult to source.
Lead author Lisa Bostrom-Einarsson said vinegar had been tried unsuccessfully before, but JCU scientists refined the process which resulted in a 100% kill rate.
Ms Bostrom-Einarsson said the findings were exciting. "Currently divers2 use 10 or 12 ml of ox-bile to kill each CoTS. It's expensive, requires permits and has to be mixed to the right concentration. We used 20 ml of vinegar, which is half the price and can be bought off the shelf at any local supermarket."
The CoTS in the JCU trial were all dead within 48 hours of being injected.
Ms Bostrom-Einarsson said the dead CoTS were fed on by fish in the lab trials with no ill-effect, but this needed to be backed up by large-scale field trials to be sure the process is totally safe for other marine3 life. "There's no reason to think it won't work or it'll be dangerous, but we have to be sure," she said.
She said the findings could have big implications for developing countries without the means to acquire and use the current drugs.
点击收听单词发音
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
上一篇:巴西发现九千年前的人类斩首实例 下一篇:北美居民捕猎三文鱼的最早证据 |
- 发表评论
-
- 最新评论 进入详细评论页>>