Caribbean's Reef-Building Coral at Risk
June 8, 2007 By DANICA COTO, Associated Press Writer
In this undated photo released by Conservation International, two colonies of brain coral, or Diploria strigosa, are seen with the effects of a disease called White Plague in an undated photo taken off the Caribbean island of Curacao. The colony on the left has died completely and the disease has spread to the colony on the right. Corals and mangroves in the Caribbean are dying faster than previously thought, and widespread development is partly to blame, according to a study released June 7, 2007 by the U.S. based Conservation International and The World Conservation Union in Switzerland. (AP Photo/Andy Bruckner, NOAA Fisheries)
(AP) -- Six species of reef-building coral could vanish from the Caribbean due to rising temperatures and toxic runoff from islands' development, according to a study released Thursday.
Content from The Associated Press expires 15 days after original publication date. For more information about The Associated Press, please visit www.ap.org .
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