State-Funded Straits of Florida Biomedical
Expedition to Include First Submersible Exploration of Remote
Cay Sal Bank
Harbor Branch Oceanographic
Institution
On Monday, the Harbor Branch drug discovery group will begin
a 2-week expedition to explore the Straits of Florida in search
of organisms that produce chemicals with the potential to
cure diseases such as cancer and Alzheimer's. The work will
include the first submersible exploration of the remote Cay
Sal Bank. This group of Bahamian islands between the Florida
Keys and Cuba was once notorious for its role in narcotics
trafficking but is now regularly patrolled by U.S. and Bahamian
authorities and better known for pristine reefs. Regular dispatches
and photos from the expedition will be posted at www.at-sea.org.
"We don't really know what organisms to expect,"
says Dr. Amy Wright, head of the Harbor Branch Biomedical
Marine Research group, "Given the difference in the
habitat, we expect to find some new species that we haven't
collected before. That's why we're going."
Cay Sal is a 60-mile wide sand bank fringed with a few small
islands and surrounded on all sides by the deep Straits of
Florida and the swiftly flowing Florida Current, which joins
with the Antilles Current to form the Gulf Stream off Central
Florida. Besides the Cay Sal Bank, the expedition will also
include several days of submersible exploration on the Miami
Terrace, a 60-mile long, ancient deep-water reef just east
of Fort Lauderdale and Miami.
During dives on the Miami Terrace in May of 2004, the team,
along with scientists from Florida Atlantic University in
Boca Raton, found incredible diversity that varied dramatically
along its length. Prior to that cruise the steep rocky walls
had only been seen from submersibles by geologists in 1970
and 1995. Dives during the Straits of Florida expedition will
be in new areas not yet explored. Besides looking for unusual
species, a key goal will be to gather samples of a sponge
collected last May that produces chemicals currently showing
potential in fighting pancreatic cancer.
The upcoming expedition is being supported through funds
appropriated by the Florida legislature and approved by Governor
Jeb Bush as part of the state's response to the U.S. Commission
on Ocean Policy's (USCOP) historic 2004 report. The report
is the first comprehensive review of the nation's management
of ocean resources in over 30 years. It calls for sweeping
changes in ocean policy including dramatic increases in ocean
science funding and restructuring of government agencies that
manage ocean resources.
"Governor Bushs response to the report was
by far one of the most substantial and relevant of any state
in the country," says Harbor Branch President and
CEO Dr. Shirley Pomponi, who was a member of the Scientific
Advisory Panel to the USCOP and will be part of the expedition.
The state also funds marine drug discovery exploration through
the Florida Atlantic University-based Center of Excellence
in Biomedical and Marine Biotechnology, which includes Harbor
Branch as a partner.
In the 1950s the Cay Sal Bank was a staging area for secret
missions in Cuba, just 30 miles away. Later, it became a notorious
stopping point for narcotics smugglers, though regular patrols
have all but eliminated that reputation. Though only about
50 miles from the Florida Keys, the Cay Sal Bank remains remote
and relatively pristine because would-be visitors must clear
customs on inhabited islands such as Bimini before heading
for the bank. This makes for a long trip that deters most.
Divers who do make the journey are fond of Cay Sal because
of its spectacular reefs, extensive cave systems, and abundant
sea life, including the elusive whale shark. Harbor Branch
scientists are attracted most to its steep topography between
about 300 and 3,000 feet, which suggests that they will find
the rocky walls that most commonly foster diverse deep-water
ecosystems.
The Cay Sal Bank is located on the edge of a narrow ocean
channel that funnels water as well as larvae and plankton
from throughout the Caribbean, in all likelihood making for
a unique habitat that will yield numerous interesting and
potentially lifesaving samples during submersible dives as
deep as 3,000 feet. The team will also conduct daily scuba
dives in search of shallow-water organisms for biomedical
testing.
Though Harbor Branch has used its submersibles to explore
the Bahamas extensively since the 1970s, this
will be the institution's first trip to Cay Sal.
Almost no information is available about the area's
deepwater habitats. Ultimately, Harbor Branch's
drug discovery group hopes to add to its growing
collection of compounds derived from marine organisms
that continue to show promise in fighting various
forms of cancer and other diseases.
Click
here for a complete list of books about natural medicine
|