4Planet

On a sun-warmed stretch of the Great Barrier Reef, our divers are bringing bleached rubble back to life. We grow healthy coral fragments in underwater nurseries, hand-plant them onto degraded reef, and track every colony's survival dive after dive. Each fragment that takes hold rebuilds shelter for fish, strengthens the reef against storms, and proves these waters can recover.
A mission by Demo Charity
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Great Barrier Reef, Australia
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We have now outplanted 1,850 coral fragments across roughly 240 square metres of reef, supported by four working nurseries. Monitoring dives show an 82% survival rate, and fish are already returning to the earliest restored patches. With $12,400 of our $50,000 goal raised, the next round of funding will let us scale outplanting toward 8,000 fragments and expand monitoring coverage.


Eleven trained community divers joined us for the season’s first major outplanting push, hand-fixing fragments onto a degraded patch we have been monitoring since spring. Between the boat crew and the water teams, hundreds of corals found a new home in a single weekend. Watching local volunteers surface grinning after their first plant was the highlight of the project so far.


Three of us spent the morning logging growth on the nursery lines, and the news is good. The first batch of fragments has fused to its substrate and put on visible tissue in just a few weeks. We recorded an early survival rate above 80% and flagged a handful of stressed pieces for relocation to shadier frames.

