Nova Southeastern University - Coral Nursery Initiative

Nova Southeastern University - Coral Nursery Initiative The NSU Coral Nursery Initiative (CNI) is a grassroots effort committed to the restoration and recov Give a Threatened coral a chance to survive!

Nova Southeastern University’s Oceanographic Center researchers (NSUOC) are currently working to save the Threatened Staghorn coral from extinction by growing it in an off-shore coral nursery until it is large enough to be outplanted back to local reefs. Our goal is to grow enough corals in our nursery to outplant thousands of coral fragments per year back to South Florida reefs so that they may c

ontinue to grow, spawn, and help in replenishing the existing Staghorn population. As a branching coral, Staghorn grows quickly, building reef structure and providing shelter/habitat for many reef fish and critters. As part of this project, we will continue to study the survivorship and health of our nursery and outplanted corals, along with the best way to grow corals in a nursery. We will also study the changes in reef fish communities surrounding our newly outplanted corals as we assist in the recovery of Staghorn coral and overall restoration of local reefs. During our current efforts of growing over 3,000 corals in our nursery we have already been able to learn about how different individuals grow, survive and are even possibly resistant to disease. The addition of more corals to our nursery from this campaign will allow us to increase the capacity of our research on this threatened coral species so we can begin to answer questions like:

Which nursery structure is the best for raising (growing) corals? Are our nursery and outplanted corals spawning? What is the most beneficial way of outplanting corals: should we plant them close together in clusters or space them out? Staghorn coral is one of two coral species listed as Threatened by the US Endangered Species Act. It was listed in 2006 after surveys confirmed that the species had not recovered from the massive die-off of the 1970’s and 1980’s. Only a few populations of this crucial coral remain. By supporting this coral restoration project you are helping to build local reefs, preserving our valuable beaches, creating new habitat for thousands of reef critters and increasing the chances of Staghorn coral reproduction during their one spawning night a year! Please help us to spread the word, and thanks for visiting our page!

We had to hop on the “this is who” trend! What a great way to introduce our team — just your friendly reminder that kids...
04/01/2026

We had to hop on the “this is who” trend! What a great way to introduce our team — just your friendly reminder that kids can do anything they set their minds to!✨🪸🧪

2025 Wrapped 🪸A year of fieldwork, coral restoration, monitoring, outplanting, conferences, and published scienceCheers ...
12/27/2025

2025 Wrapped 🪸

A year of fieldwork, coral restoration, monitoring, outplanting, conferences, and published science

Cheers to a productive 2026! ✨

Our lab’s PhD student, Marina Garmendia, successfully defended her PhD proposal focused on the population demographics, ...
12/22/2025

Our lab’s PhD student, Marina Garmendia, successfully defended her PhD proposal focused on the population demographics, genetic diversity, and restoration outcomes of Elkhorn coral (Acropora palmata) in Mexico. By integrating field surveys, genetic analyses, and long-term monitoring, her research aims to reveal patterns in population structure, health, and recovery across reef systems 🎊🪸🇲🇽

These information will guide the design and evaluation of a restoration project that incorporates both demographic and genetic information to assess restoration performance across sites.

This work will take her across multiple national parks in the Gulf of Mexico and the Mesoamerican Reef, generating valuable data to support restoration strategies and long-term reef management 🌎🪸

Follow along as this research moves forward ✨

Earlier this month, Michelle Mair successfully defended her Master’s thesis investigating population change in the commo...
12/17/2025

Earlier this month, Michelle Mair successfully defended her Master’s thesis investigating population change in the common sea fan (Gorgonia ventalina) on Florida’s Coral Reef 🎓🍾🎉

She used twelve years of CREMP and SECREMP data to analyze changes in density and colony size over time and across the Coral AP, Florida Keys, and Dry Tortugas. This presented a unique opportunity to reveal long term changes in Gorgonia ventalina across Florida’s entire reef tract!

She found that Florida’s Gorgonia ventalina population was resistant to the 2014 and 2015 heatwaves and Hurricane Irma, and significant grew between 2018 and 2023. However, the unprecedented marine heatwave in 2023 caused significant mortality on patch reefs in the Florida Keys, revealing vulnerability in this population.

Michelle plans to explore this research further by continuing to analyze spatiotemporal trends in the CREMP and SECREMP data and provide insight into the future trajectory of Florida’s benthic assemblage.

Join us in celebrating for her hard work and dedication to marine science. We can’t wait to keep her on as our newest Research Associate in the lab 🪸

IT’S FINALLY HERE! We’re so excited to join  and  for the 2026 Tortuga Music Festival! Check out the upcoming lineup and...
10/17/2025

IT’S FINALLY HERE! We’re so excited to join and for the 2026 Tortuga Music Festival! Check out the upcoming lineup and get your tickets ASAP to see Fort Lauderdale’s best country music festival and support local marine conservation agencies!
We can’t wait to see you there💙🪸🌊

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8000 N Ocean Drive
Dania Beach, FL
33004

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