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MASSIVE CORAL RECOVERY PROJECT COMPLETE ON HAWAI‘I ISLAND

 

STATE OF HAWAIʻI

KA MOKU ʻĀINA O HAWAIʻI

 

DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES

 

JOSH GREEN, M.D.
GOVERNOR

DAWN CHANG
CHAIRPERSON

 

MASSIVE CORAL RECOVERY PROJECT COMPLETE ON HAWAI‘I ISLAND

 Ring Provides Hundreds of Coral Colonies for Restoration

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

November 18, 2024

 

(HONOKŌHAU  SMALL BOAT HARBOR, Hawai‘i Island) — A collaboration of conservation divers has successfully removed and relocated nearly 11 years worth of coral growth from a decommissioned offshore fish farm pipe ring that was towed into this busy harbor last week.

 

Divers from the DLNR Division of Aquatic Resources (DAR), The Nature Conservancy (TNC), and Arizona State University (ASU) then teamed up to remove hundreds of large, healthy, native coral heads from the ring, which supported the teepee-like structure used to raise Hawaiian kanpachi (greater amberjack). Four of the fish pens remain in operation and visible just off a runway at the Ellison Onizuka Kona International Airport.

 

“Essentially, this pen has been in the water for eleven years, since 2013, and in that time, just natural recruitment of coral has happened to the point that now it’s time to take the pen out of the water. And there’s a whole, you know, eleven years’ worth of coral on the pen,” explained Julia Rose, the coral restoration program manager for TNC.

 

The partners have been working closely together over the past couple of years to build capacity for coral restoration and for emergency response. Rose added, “Opportunities like this are actually really, valuable, because the amount of time and effort and money that it would take to grow eleven years’ worth of coral that’s on these offshore pens, is huge. Any amount of coral that we can save from these pens today, is so valuable. It’s the biggest bang for the buck that you can get.”

 

The coral removal was a complex, but well-orchestrated three-day long operation. Corals on top of the pipe were not recovered as prolonged exposure to air kills them, but most everything below the water line was removed using chisels and hammers.

 

Those corals sank to the bottom of the harbor where divers collected them in milk crates that were lifted onto boats. Large coral heads were gingerly placed into water-filled coolers, while smaller ones were bubble-wrapped and placed in coolers.

 

Zachary Craig, the DAR Coral Restoration Coordinator on Hawai‘i Island said, “These structures are fantastic areas for these corals to settle on. Great in the short run, but in the long run, they need a proper reef home to survive. This is one of the largest mature colony collections that I’ve ever heard of on Hawai‘i Island.”

 

The larger corals were taken by boat back to the reef, in-shore of the fish pens. Then the full crates were lowered to the ocean floor by divers. The smaller, wrapped corals were taken to a new coral nursery at the National Energy Laboratory of Hawai‘i.

 

“In the nursery, we can give them a kind of an intensive care unit for those corals that we’re rescuing and know that we’re giving them the absolute best conditions. We can also use that nursery to do other types of research to address the causes of coral stress,” according to ASU restoration scientist Dr. Grace Klinges.

 

The ʻĀkoʻakoʻa Coral Restoration Nursery opened in May and is the first large, land-based coral nursery on Hawai‘i Island and is thought to be the biggest nursery of its type in the entire Pacific.

 

The dive teams collected hundreds of healthy colonies. Klinges reflected, “It’s great to be responding to something in a positive way where, you know, these corals would die otherwise. We think that we can save a fair number of them by working together. This is such a massive effort. I don’t think we even knew how big it was going to be until we got in the water and saw it. But I think we’ve made a monumental impact. The coral that we’ve been able to move to the nursery so far, they’re doing pretty well, and we hope they’ll continue to thrive over there.”

 

The coral heads returned to the ocean will be affixed to existing reef structure this week using a special marine epoxy.

 

Blue Ocean Mariculture is the company operating the Hawaiian kanpachi aquaculture farm. CEO Dick Jones said, “We are deeply committed to the health and resilience of Hawaiʻi’s marine ecosystems, so we’re honored to partner with the DLNR and the other partners on this coral reef restoration initiative. By providing reef samples from our net pens off the Kona Coast, we can help support the regeneration of vital species in our coral reefs, reinforcing both environmental sustainability and the balance of Hawaiʻi’s coastal waters. This collaboration is a natural extension of our team’s dedication to Hawaiʻi’s ocean ecosystems and to preserving their vitality for future generations.”

 

Added Tyler Korte, Blue Ocean Mariculture Vice President of Marine Operations, “Our offshore team is on the open ocean every day, witnessing firsthand how marine life, including coral and other reef organisms, naturally establish on our net pens off the Kona Coast. Being able to share these samples for Hawaiʻi’s reef restoration efforts is something we’re proud of, as it contributes directly to the work in regenerating healthy reef ecosystems.”

 

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RESOURCES

(All images/video courtesy: DLNR)

 

HD video – A Ring of Coral (web feature):

https://vimeo.com/1030851936

 

HD video – Coral removal and restoration project media clips (Nov. 14, 2024):

https://vimeo.com/1030086827

(Shot sheet attached)

 

HD video – Coral removal and restoration project SOTS (Nov. 14, 2024):

https://vimeo.com/1029900011

(Transcription attached)

 

Photographs – Coral removal and restoration project (Nov. 14, 2024):

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/pf3rtput1hlotip8dsjzz/AHrdErlhkoGa2BJtc7luK_s?rlkey=ykb4n71omkaeautqiv6gtabsg&st=bzzsgme0&dl=0

 

 

Media Contact:

Dan Dennison

Communications Director

Phone: 808-587-0396

Email: Dlnr.comms@hawaii.gov

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