8 years ago

The unexpected breakthrough in the quest to save coral reefs.

"Ocean acidification is probably the most important issue on the planet today!"

David Vaughan works on the Florida Reef Tract, the third largest coral reef in the world and a vastly important ecosystem for sustaining underwater life. He and a team of scientists are working to combat the crisis in the world’s coral reefs—that is, that human beings have lost 25 to 40 percent of the world’s corals in recent decades due largely to seawater temperature rise and continued acidification of the ocean.

Vaughan has developed a technique called “microfragmenting” that allows corals to grow more than 25 times faster than normal, which could rapidly restore the dwindling population of healthy coral reefs. 

Watch the original short documentaries produced by The Atlantic below:

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The Atlantic went inside the Mote Tropical Research Laboratory in Summerland Key, Florida, where Vaughan is the executive director, to uncover how the process works and understand how much hope there is to reverse the damage caused by humans.

“Ocean acidification is probably the most important issue on the planet today!” This quote comes canadian director Rob Stewart. Watch the video here. 

Photo credit: The Atlantic/Sam Price-Waldman