Diving for Starfish to Protect Palmyra’s Coral Reef

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
3 min readJul 24, 2023

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Scuba diver holds bag and long tool for coral reef treatment
A member of a Service dive team works to limit the number of crown-of-thorns starfish. Photo by Ryan Hagerty/USFWS

To find the spiked, predatory starfish, divers in the middle of the Pacific Ocean looked for the bright white feeding scars on the coral.

Find the scars and they might find the culprit: the crown-of-thorns starfish.

In April 2023, a Service dive team went to Palmyra Atoll, about 1,000 miles south of Hawaiʻi, to seek, count, and systematically disrupt the native-but-destructive marine invertebrates.

The crown-of-thorns starfish, known by ocean conservationists as COTS, is one of the largest sea stars in the world. If it were an actual crown, the head it sat upon would need to be 10–30 inches in diameter.

Close-up of starfish shows spikes and red dots on white coral.
A large crown-of-thorns starfish is attached to coral at Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge. Photo by Ryan Hagerty/USFWS

When they congregate in large numbers on a coral system, the results can be devastating, as documented across the Indian and Pacific oceans, including at the Great Barrier Reef.

“That starfish is almost like a locust on reefs when it gets out of control,” said Nancy Knowlton, chair of marine sciences at Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, in a 2012 interview about COTS on the PBS NewsHour.

“A swimmer can see a hundred or even over a thousand in a 20-minute swim when you have an outbreak going on, and they can kill up to two-thirds of a reef just in a year when that happens,” added Knowlton in the interview.

COTS outbreaks are one of the major causes of coral decline across the Great Barrier Reef over the past 40 years, according to the Australian Institute of Marine Science.

And the outbreaks are becoming more frequent in more places, even at the remote Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge, where an outbreak began in 2017.

Coral cluster is half pink and half white.
The bright white feeding scar on part of a coral is a sign that the crown-of-thorns starfish is nearby in the waters of Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge. Photo by Ryan Hagerty/USFWS

Thankfully, COTS is one threat to coral that can be treated.

Our divers at Palmyra carried bags of household vinegar and special injector guns during the April pilot study. The vinegar injections quickly cause organ failure for COTS but are harmless to other marine organisms, according to Amanda Pollock, who helped lead the dive team.

The goal was not eradication but rather to reduce COTS numbers back to their natural, pre-outbreak levels, Pollock says.

“COTS are native to Palmyra, and when in low numbers, they are an important part of the coral reef ecosystem, helping to increase the diversity of corals on the reef,” explains Pollock.

During their countless dives, ranging in depth from three feet to 100 feet, the team treated about 200 acres of coral reef.

Scuba diver holds bag and long tool for coral reef treatment
A member of a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service dive team search the coral reef of Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge for crown-of-thorns starfish. Photo by Ryan Hagerty/USFWS

Based on the success of the pilot project, there are plans for two follow-up missions in 2024, so Palmyra can continue to be known for its healthy, thriving coral reefs.

“The reefs of Palmyra have been shown to be resilient after past bleaching events, and our hope is that if we knock the COTS population back to normal levels, Palmyra will take care of the rest,” Pollock says.

Toshio Suzuki, Office of Communications, Pacific Region

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U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Written by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

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