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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, March 26, 2009

Coral off Islands is 4,200 years old

By Michael Graczyk
Associated Press

HOUSTON — A species of coral from off the coast of Hawai'i is more than 42 centuries old, making it among the oldest continuously living organisms on the planet, according to a research team led by a Texas A&M University scientist.

A coral bed in about 1,200 feet of water studied by researchers in submersible vehicles included the species Leiopathes, which carbon dating technology has put at 4,265 years old, Brendan Roark, an assistant professor in the A&M College of Geosciences, said yesterday.

That age rivals the nearly 5,000-year-old bristlecone pine trees growing in the mountains of Northern California as among nature's longest-living continuously growing organisms.

A second coral species, Gerardia, also studied in the coral beds off Hawai'i, is believed to be 2,742 years old.

It was previously thought the coral beds were no more than a few hundred years old, Roark said.

"To find out that they are thousands of years old is a very exciting time for us," said Roark, who headed the team that included scientists from Stanford University, the University of California-Santa Cruz and Australian National University in Canberra.

The results of their work are published in the current "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences."

Roark described Leiopathes (pronounced Lee-oh-PATH-eez) as a tree- or shrub-like black skeleton with an orange tissue layer. A typical medium-size specimen is about 3.2 feet tall and 3.2 feet wide.

His research team has been collecting data since 2002 and believed the coral had been living longer than deep-sea coral, with a typical lifespan that reaches to 200 or 300 years. Their initial results had been questioned in some scientific circles, so they retested and expanded the research, Roark said.

"We proved in no uncertain terms what we knew to be correct," he said, although the 4,200 years "was longer than anybody else had."

"That was a bit surprising, even to us."

He said the coral beds off Hawai'i, one of them covering several hundred square feet, are under duress from fishermen's trawling nets or long lines that contact the sea floor and by poachers who use pieces of the coral for jewelry, even though international laws protect the beds from harvesting.