florida joe
Well-Known Member
KEY LARGO — Students working with marine scientists in the Florida Keys have documented the first known case in the region where farm-raised staghorn coral have reproduced to serve as a foundation for future reefs.
Twenty-one middle and high school students from the Tampa Bay area authenticated and collected some of the cells sent from the farmed coral late Saturday night.
Originally, one-inch end clippings of live staghorn were harvested and planted in a special nursery off the Upper Keys in 2006 by the Coral Restoration Foundation. In 2007, they were transplanted at Molasses Reef, where they have grown to about two feet in diameter
Twenty-one middle and high school students from the Tampa Bay area authenticated and collected some of the cells sent from the farmed coral late Saturday night.
Originally, one-inch end clippings of live staghorn were harvested and planted in a special nursery off the Upper Keys in 2006 by the Coral Restoration Foundation. In 2007, they were transplanted at Molasses Reef, where they have grown to about two feet in diameter