Europe's cold-water coral reefs are similar to coral reefs in tropical seas except that they don't need sunlight to survive and so can live in the depths of the North Atlantic Ocean. Unlike their tropical relatives that mainly rely on microscopic algae in their tissues for sustenance, cold-water corals feed by capturing food particles from the surrounding water.
Lophelia pertusa is the most common cold-water coral species and is formed by a colony of organisms called polyps that produce a hard carbonate skeleton. It is normally found at depths of between 200 and 1000 metres.
On average the coral structure grows at the rate of 1mm in height per year and the highest reefs found so far have been measured at an impressive 35m at Sula Ridge off the Norwegian coast. Reef structures take centuries to form and fragments taken from the reef at Sula have been dated as being 8500 years old.
Further information: Download the ICES report on cold-water corals
( (Section-3 as Word doc - 6.9 MB ))
(( Section-3 as zip. doc - 5.4 MB ))
For further information about ICES please contact:
Neil Fletcher Communication Officer. International Council for the Exploration of the Sea. Palęgade 2-4, DK-1261, Copenhagen K, Denmark. Tel (0045) 3315 2677 Fax (0045) 3392 4215 E-mail neilf@ices.dk
For further information about cold-water corals please contact:
Mark Tasker JNCC (( http://www.jncc.gov.uk/ )) Dunnet House 7, Thistle Place Aberdeen AB10 1UZ United Kingdom Tel: 0044 (0)1224 655 701 Fax: 0044 (0)1224 621 488 Mobile: 0044 (0)7971 078441 E-mail: tasker_m@jncc.gov.uk
NOTES FOR EDITORS
ICES is the organisation that coordinates and promotes marine research in the North Atlantic. This includes adjacent seas such as the Baltic Sea and North Sea. ICES acts as a meeting point for a community of more than 1600 marine scientists from 19 countries around the North Atlantic.
Scientists working through ICES gather information about the marine ecosystem. As well as filling gaps in existing knowledge, this information is also developed into unbiased, non-political advice. The advice is then used by the 19 member countries, which fund and support ICES, to help them manage the North Atlantic Ocean and adjacent seas. The annual budget is 25 million dkk.
ICES plans and coordinates marine research through a system of committees, more than 100 working groups, symposia, and an Annual Science Conference. Most meetings take place either at the ICES Headquarters in Copenhagen, Denmark, or in the member countries. ICES has been based in Copenhagen, Denmark, since 1902. Today, we have a Secretariat of 38 staff who provide scientific, administrative and secretarial support to the ICES Community of over 1600 marine scientists.
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