(The link is to video from 2 days ago, a report on its success. Since you can't see video here, I'm linking to an article from a couple of months ago that reported on the project.)
From CNN: Florida group rebuilds vital coral reefs
Key Largo, Florida (CNN) -- It was more than 40 years ago, but Ken Nedimyer still remembers the first time he went diving in the Florida Keys.
"It was just the most
magical place I'd ever been to," said Nedimyer, 56. "The coral reefs
were so pretty. So many fish and so many neat things to see."
Nedimyer became a
commercial fisherman and tropical fish collector, working in the ocean
nearly every day of the year. But by the mid-1980s, he noticed a
troubling trend.
Two of the region's most
important corals, staghorn and elkhorn, were in drastic decline. The
corals -- tiny, stationary marine animals that make up the reefs -- were
dying because of many reasons, including climate change, pollution and
overfishing, experts said.
Today, they're on the endangered species list.
"The coral reefs of the
Florida Keys are the most threatened and the heaviest-used coral reefs
in the world," said Billy Causey, southeast regional director of the
National Marine Sanctuaries, an entity of the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration.
Ken Nedimyer became worried watching coral reefs decline over the years. Now he's doing something about it.
Reefs are often referred
to as the rainforests of the sea. They attract more marine life than
anywhere else in the ocean because of the natural shelter they provide.
But they're declining worldwide, not just in Florida, and some
scientists fear that they could all be gone by 2050.
"Coral reefs provide
protection for our coastal areas, habitat for fish and recreational
opportunities for millions and millions of people," Nedimyer said. "It's
very important to protect that whole ecosystem."
Reefs also have great
economic value. Many people around the world depend on fisheries and the
ocean for their livelihood. In the Florida Keys alone, more than 50
percent of the local economy is connected to a healthy marine
environment.
"If coral reefs died completely, entire economies would be disrupted," Nedimyer said.
As Nedimyer saw reefs die over the years, he became very concerned.
A look at an underwater coral nursery
"It became a consuming passion (for me) to try to find ways to protect and restore coral reefs," he said.
That passion led to Nedimyer starting the Coral Restoration Foundation,
which has grown more than 25,000 staghorn and elkhorn corals in
underwater nurseries. He and his staff of volunteers work three days a
week maintaining the nurseries just off Key Largo. The nurseries cover
more than an acre of the ocean floor.
"Ken's coral nursery is
the largest in the wider Caribbean," Causey said. "It's probably 10
times larger than any others that I know of."
Nedimyer's methods for
growing corals have evolved over the years, but they're all simple,
easily duplicated and can be taught to anyone who can dive, he said.
After the corals spend
about a year growing in the nursery, they are transplanted to a reef in
the wild. The goal is to get them to reproduce on their own and
repopulate an area where they no longer exist.
The Coral Restoration Foundation grows corals in underwater nurseries. After about a year, the corals are taken to the wild.
"We've been able to
recreate one of the biggest thickets in the Florida Keys of staghorn
coral, and that's something we can duplicate throughout the Keys and
throughout the Caribbean," Nedimyer said.
Through education and
awareness, Nedimyer has built a community committed to bringing coral
reefs back to the Keys. His organization often collaborates with other
groups, including the NOAA and the Nature Conservancy, a nonprofit
conservation group. Nedimyer also spends a lot of time showing high
school students his methods and working with them at his nurseries.
"This isn't just about
me," Nedimyer emphasized. "It's about engaging a lot of people and
training people, and I think it has a lot of hope."
The impact is already
noticeable in areas where corals have been transplanted. Fish and other
marine life are starting to come back, and Nedimyer is hopeful that in
time, the Keys' ecosystem will recover.
"Most people think coral
takes forever to grow, but some of these corals grow really fast," he
said. "They grow fast enough that we could make a big difference in a
lifetime or less."
Nedimyer's most
ambitious project is just ahead. Within the next five years, the Coral
Restoration Foundation plans to grow and transplant 50,000 corals in the
Keys, which he says is the largest effort of its kind in Florida and
the Caribbean.
"Before, I felt helpless
watching corals die," Nedimyer said. "Now I think there's a way for
everybody to get involved. There's hope."
Want to get involved? Check out the Coral Restoration Foundation website at www.coralrestoration.org and see how to help.
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