
SUMMERLAND KEY, FL — The Nature Conservancy’s Florida Keys program is transplanting fragments
of wild staghorn coral to restore degraded reefs in the Upper Keys with the help of a $36,000
grant awarded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Scientists also
will be testing the staghorn’s resistance to heat stress that leads to coral bleaching.
The reef-building staghorn coral (Acropora cervicornis) has experienced a massive decline throughout
Florida and the Caribbean due to local, regional and global threats. Conservancy staff collected
100 staghorn colonies to add to the staghorn colonies populating a privately owned underwater nursery
in the Upper Keys. The new colonies were fragmented and cemented onto platforms within the nursery.
In May, these corals will again be fragmented and then transplanted to multiple restoration sites, to
be monitored by staff and volunteers.
The $36,000 grant is part of a national partnership between the NOAA Community-based Restoration
Program and The Nature Conservancy. The Conservancy is working in collaboration with the Florida Keys
National Marine Sanctuary, where the restoration sites are located, and Ken Nedimyer, who owns the
nursery and is helping collect, tend, plant and monitor the corals.
Scientists will also analyze the genes of the coral colonies to test the theory that some genes
are better than others at resisting the heat stress that leads to coral bleaching and sometimes
death. Additional data from reefs at different depths and distances from shore will indicate heat
tolerance and suitability for restoration. Identifying these factors about reef resilience is part
of the Florida Reef Resilience Program, a federal/state/Nature Conservancy partnership.
“The grant will help restore damaged reefs in the Upper Keys to a healthy condition and that in turn
will preserve the delicate ecological balance that is so important to Keys residents and to folks from
all over the world who marvel at the beauty of our Florida Keys," said Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Miami), who
supports this grant funding. "I am committed to conservation in the Keys and proud that this funding will
be used for such a great project in my district.”
Volunteer divers and boat operators interested in helping to monitor restoration sites should contact.
The Nature Conservancy’s Meaghan Johnson at (305) 745-8402.
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