Florida’s Coral Reef: Our Underwater National Treasure

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Sure, you’ve heard of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, but have you heard of Florida’s Coral Reef?

It’s big, it’s beautiful, it’s one of the many things that makes Florida special. But despite its grandeur and vital importance, many don’t realize that just off Florida’s coast is the only living barrier reef in the continental U.S.

This natural wonder stretches more than 350 miles from the Dry Tortugas to Martin County. To put that in perspective, that’s like driving from Miami to Jacksonville.

Why is this important? Because Florida’s Coral Reef not only acts as a buffer to the coastline when storms hit, it is the crown jewel of Florida’s coastal resources, providing shelter, food and breeding sites for many of your favorite marine species. Black grouper anyone?

Each year, Florida’s Coral Reef supports over 71,000 full and part-time jobs and generates over $6.3 billion in combined local sales and income associated with snorkeling, scuba diving, fishing, beach activities and more.

But in case you’ve missed it in the news, Florida’s Coral Reef has been suffering from a hard-to-beat illness.

Stony coral tissue loss disease has been ravaging Florida’s Coral Reef for over 7 years, killing millions of coral colonies.

Nearly half of Florida’s 45 stony coral species are impacted by this disease, including major reef-building corals like boulder and brain corals.

While coral diseases are common, like colds in humans, this disease event is unique due to its large geographic range, long duration, rapid spread through the entire reef, high rates of mortality and the large number of species affected.

 

Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) biologist John Hunt, who has been studying and diving Florida’s Coral Reef for 40 years, recalls the beauty that once was, and the devastation that he sees today.

“When I arrived in the Florida Keys in 1981 from North Carolina, Florida’s offshore coral reefs were filled with large branching corals so big that you’d sometimes have to go around them when snorkeling. They were very colorful, vibrant and filled with fish and corals,” Hunt said. “Today, 40 years later, those vertical coral structures are gone, and the vibrant colors of the reef have become dull. I swim over them, and that level of excitement and anticipation I used to feel is just a little bit less.”

Ok, if like me, you are starting to worry, take a deep breath and know that the FWC, along with the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, NOAA, and the National Park Service, are working with over 60 partners from federal, state, and local agencies, non-governmental organizations, universities, and members of the community to investigate the disease and save Florida’s corals.

“I don’t think there’s a project we are working on that is any more important,” said Commissioner Robert Spottswood at a recent Commission meeting regarding our coral work.

We have rescued healthy corals before they were impacted by the disease and we are now rescuing corals that survived the disease, moving them to zoos and aquariums for safekeeping. We are testing treatments that may help prevent the further spread of the disease, monitoring and researching why this is happening and what is causing it, growing new offspring of rescued coral (called propagation), and, when the baby corals are big enough, working with partners to outplant them back on the reef.

It’s been a herculean effort and we can’t do this alone. We need your help anglers, spearfishers, divers and snorkelers, lobster-lovers and beachgoers.

You can start by visiting MyFWC.com/CoralDisease, learning as much as you can about Florida’s Coral Reef and the disease and by finding ways to get involved like joining Florida’s Coral Crew.

Here’s a few other things you can also do to help:

  1. Avoid touching corals while diving.
  2. Don’t anchor near corals and be aware of shallow reef areas.
  3. Clean diving gear between dives in different locations.
  4. Report any observations of coral disease, or other marine incidents to SEAFAN: SEAFAN.net.
  5. Use environmentally friendly sunscreens made from zinc or titanium dioxide (or that do not contain oxybenzone or octinoxate).
  6. Practice Florida-Friendly Landscaping™ and avoid over-fertilizing or applying fertilizer before heavy rains.
  7. Secure your trash on your boat and bring reusable water bottles.
  8. Support coral research through the Fish & Wildlife Foundation of Florida. Learn more at WildlifeFlorida.org.

“My hope is the restoration activities that we are all embarking on will restore that structure and vibrancy,” said Hunt.

Saving Florida’s corals isn’t just about stopping the disease, it’s about creating a healthy coral reef that can better withstand the disease and other impacting factors. Because healthy habitats = more fish, and let’s face it, we all want more fish.

Learn more about coral disease and Florida Coral Rescue.

Did you know?

Coral reefs occupy less than 1 percent of the world’s oceans, but it is estimated that approximately 25 percent of marine fish species inhabit coral reefs during some part of their lives.

 

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