Our work

Where we work • What we've accomplished so far • Five-year goals and 50-year aspirations • Why our work matters

[Coming soon: Each index item linked to section below]



Where we work

[Coming soon: Higher-resolution map]

 

 

What we've accomplished so far

[Coming soon: Updated numbers by institution]

Five-year goals and 50-year aspirations

[Coming soon: graphics/photos]

Five-year goals

  • Expand and formalize a database for tracking collected, held and cryopreserved specimens.
  • Enhance and continue to develop and refine cutting edge science for coral fragments with a focus on cryopreservation.
  • Scale up and build out by increasing geographic node operations and expanding the core functions of the Alliance.
  • Collect reaching collection goals for each year until 2026 to reach overall aim of holding complete, known, genetic diversity of corals.

50-year aspirations

  • Create a system that not only holds the coral fragments collected by the alliance, but create links between restoration organizations to help fuel their efforts to reintroduce species.
  • Continue making efforts towards assisted evolution and maintaining a large cryo-banking system for fragments.
  • In-depth genetic testing of the coral samples collected so the overall scientific understanding of corals can be expanded to further improve future efforts.

Why our work matters

[Coming soon: Details on the importance of preserving coral genetic diversity]

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