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<br />Roxcie L. Waltjen <br />Harry Kim <br />Director <br />Mayor <br /> <br /> <br />Maurice C. Messina <br /> <br />Wil Okabe <br />Deputy Director <br />Managing Director <br /> <br />DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION <br />101 Pauahi Street, Suite 6  Hilo, Hawai‘i 96720 <br />(808) 961-8311  Fax (808) 961-8411 <br />Email: parks_recreation@hawaiicounty.gov <br />http://www.hawaiicounty.gov/parks-and-recreation/ <br /> <br /> <br />April 11, 2019 <br /> <br />NEWS RELEASE <br /> <br />Kahalu‘u Beach Park to Close on May 20-21 Due to Coral Spawning <br /> <br /> <br />Hawai‘i County Department of Parks and Recreation is informing the public that <br />Kahalu’u Beach Park will be closed on May 20 and May 21, 2019 due to anticipated <br />coral spawning events. <br /> <br />According to the Division of Aquatic Resources and Eyes of the Reef Network, <br />cauliflower coral (Pocillopora meandrina) was once abundant on shallow coral reefs <br />along West Hawai'i, including Kahalu'u Bay. However, environment stressors and very <br />high ocean temperatures impacted West Hawai'i in 2015 and caused catastrophic <br />bleaching and mortality of more than 90% of the regional population of cauliflower <br />coral. <br /> <br />To recover from this loss in the coral population, natural reproduction events are <br />critically important. For more than a decade, researchers have observed annual <br />broadcast spawning events for cauliflower corals, and can now accurately predict when <br />they will likely occur based on season, solar, tidal, and lunar cycles. <br /> <br />During broadcast spawning events, corals emit reproductive cells ("gametes") into the <br />water column and these materials are carried by the tides to mix and generate <br />planktonic coral larvae. The high volume of daily visitors to Kahalu'u Bay may cause <br />harm to larval corals due to physical and chemical disturbances (e.g. sunscreens and <br />other personal care items) in surface waters of the bay. In recent studies, oxybenzone <br />chemicals in sunscreens were shown to cause damage to larval corals and prevent <br />successful settlement on the reef. <br />After many years of unsuccessful cauliflower coral larvae settlement within a laboratory <br />setting, the very first successful settlement occurred last year at the Natural Energy <br />Laboratory of Hawaii Authority (NELHA) on Hawaii Island. Undisturbed by pollutants <br />and human activity, it took as little as 24 hours for coral gametes to find proper colony <br />areas within the tanks. <br />County of Hawai‘i is an Equal Opportunity Provider and Employer. <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />