In August 1988. the Sixth International Coral Reef Symposium was held in
Townsville resulting in an influx of most of the world's coral reef
sCientists to the city. We seized this opportunity at the Australian
Institute of Marine Science to run a small workshop immediately before
the symposium on the outbreaks of the crown-of-thorns starfish.
Aeanthaster planei. We invited that small band of mathematicians who had
been modelling the phenomenon, (and who may not have normally attended
an international meeting so thoroughly dedicated to natural science) to
meet with those SCientists who had been been actively working on the
phenomenon in the field. John Casti notes in his delightful new book
Alternate Realities (Wiley, 1989): 'If the natural role of the
experimenter is to generate new observables by which we know the
processes of Nature, and the natural role of the mathematician is to
generate new formal structures by which we can represent these
processes. then the system SCientist finds his niche by serving as a
broker between the two. ' I think our book shows the fruits of that
brokerage through the wide range of models explored within its pages.
the high level of collaboration and interaction across disciplines
evident in the individual papers, and in the emerging synthesis that
reflects a far deeper understanding of this complex phenomenon than was
possible even a few years ago.