• Celebrating the Success of Local Partners Who Overcame Challenges During COVID-19

    Celebrating the Success of Local Partners Who Overcame Challenges During COVID-19

    Think back to 2020—hospital visits rose as COVID cases climbed, borders closed, businesses and schools shut down, and people panicked. The world we once knew spun upside down in a matter of days. And like so many, ocean conservation organizations, which depend highly on tourism revenue, suddenly faced unprecedented challenges as they worked to protect

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  • Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease Detected in Honduras — Here’s What That Means

    Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease Detected in Honduras — Here’s What That Means

    While the coronavirus pandemic spread around the world, a destructive disease was also wreaking havoc underwater on coral reefs: stony coral tissue loss disease.   This fast-spreading disease, which can rapidly kill huge swaths of coral if left untreated, was recently discovered in coral reefs off the coasts of Roatán, Guanaja, and Utila, three Caribbean islands

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  • Breaking the Taboo Around Pee and Poo to Help Save Coral Reefs

    Breaking the Taboo Around Pee and Poo to Help Save Coral Reefs

    Most of us are all too happy to flush the toilet and send our waste down the drain, where it flows far, far away and we never have to think about it again. But this wastewater actually deserves more of our attention. All around the world, sewage is polluting the oceans and causing harm to

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  • Making the Case for a Biological Corridor

    Making the Case for a Biological Corridor

    In 2018, a law passed that opened up parts of the Honduran North Coast to commercial fishing—prior, only artisanal fishers were able to fish within certain areas. While some of the coastline lies within marine protected areas (MPAs), we suspected that fish populations along the coastline were all connected. If the MPAs weren’t somehow connected,

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  • There’s Nothing Romantic About Sewage

    There’s Nothing Romantic About Sewage

    There’s a certain romanticized notion of what it must be like to be a coral reef scientist: living in a tropical environment with beautiful white sand beaches, snorkeling and diving every day, surrounded by colorful wildlife and pristine turquoise waters. Sounds dreamy, doesn’t it? And for Dr. Antonella Rivera, Principal Investigator for the Coral Reef

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