National Geographic UK - 03.2020

(Barry) #1
BEAUTIFUL AND FRAGILE, coral reefs in
tropical oceans worldwide are threat-
ened by climate change, storms, and
bleaching. Now travelers can help
restore them by supporting coral
replanting programs.
National Geographic Explorer Paola
Rodríguez-Troncoso has worked on
a Mexican program that sustainably
replanted more than 6,000 coral frag-
ments over six years. In this project,
divers collect fragments from the
ocean floor that have been knocked
off reefs by storms or waves. Then they
tether healthy pieces to the substrata
of reefs at the same or nearby sites. It’s
a process that can vary by location.

For example, in some areas where
reefs border lagoons, such as French
Polynesia (below), the coral fragments
are placed in underwater nurseries to
recuperate before replanting.
Resorts and conservation groups are
starting to educate and involve visi-
tors in these efforts. To avoid programs
that may do more harm than good,
Rodríguez-Troncoso cautions against
any that purposely break off fragments
from healthy corals or fail to get the
required permits. Though replanted
fragments grow slowly, each one can be
part of a reef ’s centuries-long life span.
“That small seed,” Rodríguez-Troncoso
says, “that will really help.”

REEF REVIVAL


BY THERESA MACHEMER

TRAVEL | DISCOVERY


In Moorea, French
Polynesia, the nonprofit
group Coral Gardeners
tends broken pieces of
coral on a nursery table
for one month before
reattaching them to
reefs. Travelers there can
adopt a coral piece and
help the group plant it.

PHOTO: CRISTINA MITTERMEIER, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC IMAGE COLLECTION
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