Oceanographers Hezi Gildor of Israel and
Riyad Manasrah of Jordan aboard a research vessel in the Gulf of
Aqaba. The scientists are collaborating with Stanford University
researchers to protect the gulf's fragile marine ecosystem from
toxic spills.
Stephen Monismith, Stanford University
Scientists from Stanford University have teamed up with Israeli
and Jordanian researchers to protect the
Gulf of Aqaba, a strategic waterway whose fragile marine
ecosystem is vital to both Israel and Jordan. Participants in the
NATO-funded project say they are bridging the Arab-Israeli
political divide for the sake of science, peace and environmental
conservation.
"The people involved are interested in international
collaboration in science and protecting the place they live," said
project co-director Stephen
Monismith, a professor of civil and
environmental engineering at Stanford. "Nothing in the
ocean understands political borders."
That's especially true in the Gulf of Aqaba (known in Israel as
the Gulf of Eilat), a 99-mile-long extension of the Red Sea
surrounded by four countries Israel, Jordan, Egypt and Saudi
Arabia. Lush coral reefs flourish here, offering habitat for
hundreds of fish and invertebrate species. The beaches and reefs
have turned the neighboring cities of Aqaba, Jordan, and Eilat,
Israel, into major tourist destinations that provide much-needed
income for both countries.
But the gulf is also an important transportation route for oil,
and its shores are lined with industrial plants, naval bases and
chemical export facilities, all of which threaten to spoil the
delicate marine ecosystem.
Science for peace
To protect the gulf against oil and other toxic spills,
Monismith and Stanford colleague Jeffrey
Koseff, a professor of civil and environmental engineering,
embarked on a unique collaboration with four marine scientists from
the Middle East Jordanians Riyad Manasrah and Tariq Al-Najjar, and
Israelis Amatzia Genin and Hezi Gildor.
In November 2006, the researchers were awarded a three-year
grant from the
NATO Science for Peace and Security Program to study the
physical processes that drive water circulation on the surface of
the gulf. The goal of the project is to provide detailed
oceanographic data that will help environmental agencies in Israel
and Jordan respond to spills and minimize pollution.
"The movement of surface currents is a big part of how an oil
spill spreads," said Monismith, a senior fellow at Stanford's Woods Institute for the
Environment. "Our idea was to create a real-time map with the
surface currents, and then theoretically we could see where the
spill is going and clean it up."
Since 2007, the scientific team has installed three
high-frequency radar systems two in Israel and one in Jordan that
measure surface currents on both sides of the gulf, along with
Acoustic Doppler Current Profilers, which use sonar to measure
current velocities at various depths, and other instruments.
So far, the researchers have discerned gyres, internal waves and
a large-scale convection in the surface waters. These findings have
greatly increased the understanding of how currents behave inside
the gulf, and how water is exchanged between the gulf and the
larger Red Sea, Monismith said.
Beyond borders
In spring 2008, as part of the data-gathering process, Monismith
traveled to Jordan to join his Middle East colleagues on the first
cross-gulf scientific expedition.
"We boarded a boat in Aqaba with a Jordanian crew, and we did
transects from coast to coast," recalled project co-director Amatzia Genin,
a professor of ecology at the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem. "We had oceanographic equipment, and we did
transects back and forth between Jordan and Israel. There was no
customs, no passports, no police. That was the first time ever, and
that was so nice."
The cruise was "an exciting accomplishment for both Jordan and
Israel," added Koseff, co-director of Stanford's Woods Institute.
"It's also been a very positive program for Stanford and gives
students amazing opportunities to work internationally." To date,
three Stanford graduate students have completed core elements of
their doctoral dissertation work in the gulf.
In addition to mitigating environmental disasters, an
understanding of how the gulf circulates and mixes could help
officials plan large-scale water projects, such as the proposed
Red Sea-Dead Sea Canal. That project aims to provide power and
fresh water to Jordan, one of the most water-starved countries in
the world, but its environmental consequences remain a source of
controversy.
"This is really just the start for understanding the dynamics of
water circulation in the gulf," said NATO project co-director Riyad
Manasrah, a physical oceanographer at the
Marine Science Station in Aqaba, Jordan. "We still need more
work to fully understand how the gulf water mixes with the Red
Sea."
Eventually, the scientists hope to work jointly with researchers
in Egypt and Saudi Arabia, two other countries that border the
gulf. Meanwhile, the research team has asked NATO to extend the
Stanford-Jordanian-Israeli project through 2010.
"For me, this is the first joint project with colleagues from an
Arab country," said project co-director Hezi Gildor,
a physical oceanographer from the Weizmann Institute of Science
in Rehovot, Israel. "From my point of view, it has worked very
well. We shared the data, we shared the instruments, we did a joint
cruise. It was a nice and unique experience to deal with this type
of collaboration, and I'm looking forward to continuing it."
Cassandra Brooks is a writer intern at the Woods Institute
for the Environment at Stanford.