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A group photo of international and local collaborators at the coral restoration workshop led by the Roatán Marine Park. (© Roatán Marine Park)
There were multiple spawning events during the coral restoration workshop, including this mountainous star coral. (Lisa Larkin © California Academy of Sciences)
Academy researchers working alongside international and local partners to build Coral Rearing In-situ Basins (CRIBs) for on-island restoration efforts. (Lisa Larkin © California Academy of Sciences)
By collecting the gametes from a coral spawning event, researchers can perform experiments to detect and selectively breed hardier corals for restoration. (Lisa Larkin © California Academy of Sciences) 
Seeding units in the CRIBs allow for corals to mature in a controlled setting before being re-introduced into the wild. (Lisa Larkin © California Academy of Sciences)

Press Center

California Academy of Sciences teams up with international conservation partners for coral spawning and restoration workshop in Honduras

Academy biologists helped train local researchers, co-develop research questions, and collect coral spawn.

ROATÁN, HONDURAS (September 27, 2022) — This month, coral biologists from the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco joined an international cadre of organizations, including the Roatán Marine Park (RMP), SECORE International, German Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ), Mi Ambiente, and the Bay Islands National Marine Park (BINMP), for a two-week coral spawning and restoration training in Roatán, Honduras. The training program, which the Academy joined as part of its Hope for Reefs initiative to reverse the decline of Earth’s coral reefs by 2030, equipped local researchers with knowledge and best practices for rearing corals in human care, and facilitated the co-development of research questions that will be explored in the island’s first-ever coral restoration center—currently under construction—as scientists work to better understand and address threats facing local corals.

“We are thrilled to share this expertise and knowledge with marine protected area co-managers, and scale up coral restoration efforts to mitigate stony coral tissue loss disease impacts in Honduras,” says Roatán Marine Park Executive Director Francis Lean. “The past few days, we have seen the commitment and passion of each participant, to protect and conserve our marine ecosystems.”

"This partnership—and the island’s first coral restoration facility—opens up whole new research opportunities for the Roatán Marine Park,” says Academy coral biologist Elora López-Nandam, who attended the training. “It was wonderful collaborating with them to help co-develop research goals and questions that will provide localized and actionable insights to protect the marine park's coral reefs.”

This collaboration, implemented by GIZ on behalf of the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, ultimately seeks to build coral restoration capacity in Caribbean countries. In order to achieve those aims, RMP organized the two-week training with SECORE International, GIZ, and Mi Ambiente, and, given the tremendous success of the Academy’s own coral rearing efforts in the Coral Spawning Lab, reached out to the Academy for additional support.

More than 20 local representatives, including biologists, managers of the Bay Islands, Tela, and Cayos Cochinos Marine Protected Areas (MPAs), and government officials, attended the training, where they learned:

"This was a great opportunity to share what we've learned from spawning and raising corals in human care at the Academy with the Roatán Marine Park and other partners," says Academy biologist Lisa Larkin, who was also at the training. “Projects such as this, that involve local partners from the start and are on-the-ground in locations where corals are ailing, are critical for successful conservation.”

These efforts are just one part of the Academy’s continued collaborations with the Roatán Marine Park, which kicked off last June with a scientific expedition to the region’s mesophotic—or twilight zone—coral reefs. The Academy’s Hope for Reefs team will return to the island in 2023 to further co-develop research questions and education and outreach programs to help ensure a regenerative future for Roatán’s coral reefs.

To join the Academy’s coral reef work in Roatán and beyond, use #HopeforReefs on social media and follow @calacademy on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.