Florida Keys Sanctuary Announces $100 Million Coral Restoration Program
KEY LARGO (CBSMiami/FKNB) – NOAA and its Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary Monday announced an intent to raise almost $100 million to restore seven iconic coral reef sites off the Florida Keys.
"Mission: Iconic Reefs" calls for restoring nearly 3 million square feet of the Florida Reef Tract, about the size of 52 football fields, one of the largest strategies ever proposed in the field of coral restoration, sanctuary officials said. NOAA officials said it would support the multi-decade effort and work with partners to secure public and private funds.
"We have identified some iconic reefs here in the Keys that we want to help restore," said Sarah Fangman, the sanctuary's superintendent said at a news conference in Key Largo. "These reefs have been suffering from a number of threats for years as have reefs around the world."
Fangman said efforts to find funding have begun.
"We anticipate funding to support this mission to come from a variety of sources," she said. "State, federal, nonprofit and private partnerships, so it will take a number of resources."
Since the 1970s, tropical cyclones, heat-induced coral bleaching, cold snaps and disease events have reduced coral coverage in the Keys.
Over the past 15 years, pioneering restoration efforts involving growing and transplanting corals have proven successful in the Keys, setting the stage for the large-scale restoration effort at seven reefs within the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, from Key Largo to Key West, including Carysfort Reef, Horseshoe Reef, Cheeca Rocks, Sombrero Reef, Newfound Harbor, Looe Key Reef and Eastern Dry Rocks.
The sites, officials said, represent a diversity of habitats, support a variety of human uses, span the full geographic range of the Florida Keys and show a high probability of success.
The restoration effort is to incorporate a phased implementation approach over the next 20 years. The first phase is to take about 10 years and focus on restoring elkhorn and staghorn corals, fast-growing species that have not been affected by the current outbreak of stony coral tissue loss disease, as well as incorporating resilient corals of other slower-growing species. At the sites, scientists are to remove nuisance and invasive species like algae and snails, and reintroduce sea urchins and crabs to help keep the reefs clean and healthy.
The second phase is to concentrate on introducing slower-growing, foundational coral species propagated from colonies that have survived or been rescued from bleaching and disease events. The goal is to restore diversity and ecological function to the reefs by returning coral cover at target reef sites to a self-sustaining level.
Partners include the State of Florida, Coral Restoration Foundation, Mote Marine Laboratory and Aquarium, The Florida Aquarium, The Nature Conservancy, Reef Renewal and the National Marine Sanctuary Foundation.
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