Living Oceans Foundation leads Red
Sea expedition
Khaled bin
Sultan Living Oceans Foundation
Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation will lead an all-star
team of scientist divers on an expedition to study the "rainforests"
of the Red Sea. State-of-the-art technology will enable the
team to complete years of coral reef research in just three
weeks. The research will focus on threats to coral health
such as global climate change, ecotourism, over-fishing, pollution
and development.
"This will be some of the most advanced coral reef
environment research, with the fastest turnaround and major
international impact, to date," said Philip Renaud,
executive director of Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation.
"Our findings will guide future international policy
on coral reef protection and Marine Protected Areas management."
Coral health has global economic, social and ecological implications:
- Coral reefs support more than 25 percent of all marine
fish species.
- Reefs provide fisheries with 6 million metric tons of
fish annually. Industries based on coral reefs provide millions
of jobs.
- The total value of the world's reef resources is approximately
$375 billion each year.
- Coral reefs are a primary source of new drugs and biochemicals.
The expedition represents the first in which a Saudi Arabian
government commission has partnered with a U.S. foundation
to work in Saudi territory. The team, scheduled to leave May
3, will include U.S., U.K., Canadian, Austrian, French and
Saudi scientists. They will map and survey the Farasan Islands
Marine Protected Area, off the coast of Jizan, Saudi Arabia.
"The Farasan Islands are of particular interest for
their biodiversity and range of human impact," said
Renaud. "Their population has quadrupled in a decade
and the ecotourism and commercial fishing industries in the
region have grown tremendously."
The Foundation has selected 15 schools (5 U.S., 5 U.K., 5
Saudi Arabian) to participate virtually in the expedition.
High school students studying marine science will track and
analyze expedition progress and participate in near real-time
Q&A with the scientists.
Also joining the research team is a professional film crew.
Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation plans to use footage
from the expedition to produce a professional documentary
film.
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