Coral Reef Project Active
Explore the fascinating undersea world of coral reefs. Learn how we map, monitor, and model coral reefs so we can better understand, protect, and preserve our Nation's reefs.
Coral reefs are unique ecosystems of plants, animals, and their associated geological framework. Coral reefs cover less than 0.5 percent of the earth's surface, but are home to an estimated 25 percent of all marine species. Second only to tropical rainforests in size and complexity, some scientists estimate that more than one million species of plants and animals are associated with coral reefs. Coral reefs are also of great economic importance to those who live on or visit islands in the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. Reefs shelter and provide nursery grounds for many commercially and culturally important species of fish and invertebrates, they protect the islands' harbors, beaches, and shorelines from erosion and wave damage by storms, and they are vital to the marine tourism industry. These diverse ecosystems provide valuable goods and services worth about $4 billion each year to the U.S.’s coastal communities. Yet, as important as coral reefs are, these ecosystems are being threatened worldwide.
More than 8,500 square miles (22,000 square kilometers) of coral reef habitat is found in U.S. waters. Most of these coral reefs still appear to be relatively healthy, but some areas of dead and dying coral have been found in recent years. The causes of this degradation are poorly known, but are probably in part related to human activities.
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), working closely with academic institutions, state, and other Federal agencies, is spearheading an effort to better understand the geologic and oceanographic controls on the structure and processes of our Nation's coral reef ecosystems.
This web site is a gateway to USGS studies of coral reefs. We focus on the geophysical processes that influence the health and sustainability of coral reefs. From this work we are gaining new insight into the structure of coral reefs, providing the basis for future monitoring, and understanding better both the influences of natural processes and impacts of human activities on coral reef health. These efforts will help to preserve and protect the biodiversity, health, and social and economic value of these remarkable habitats.
Read more coral reef facts.
Learn about our current studies by topic.
Climate Change and Land-use Histories
We are developing new and unique oceanographic and environmental archives from coral skeleton records to better understand the compounding effects of land-use and environmental change on coral reef health.
We are conducting geophysical and geochemical research to address questions about coastal groundwater-to-reef flow and coral reef health, with the goal of informing management decisions related to planning and implementing activities in priority watershed-coral reef systems.
Reef Hydrodynamics and Sediment Processes
We are developing a better understanding how tides, waves, currents, and both land- and reef-derived sediment influence the development of coral reefs and their adjacent shorelines.
Role of Reefs in Coastal Protection
We are combining ocean, engineering, ecologic, social, and economic modeling to provide a high-resolution, rigorous, spatially-explicit valuation of the coastal flood protection benefits provided by coral reefs and the cost effectiveness of reef restoration for enhancing those benefits.
Reef Resource Assessments - Planning for the Future
We are mapping and assessing all of the important geologic and oceanographic factors to identify those coral reefs most at risk and those reefs that are potentially the most resilient and the most likely to recover from natural and human-driven impacts.
Also, learn about our studies by location:
- Guam
- Hawai‛i
- Kaho‛olawe
- Kaua‛i
- Kwajalein Island
- Lāna‛i
- Maui
- Moloka‛i
- O‛ahu
- Puerto Rico
- Roi-Namur Island
- Tutuila
Please also see the associated Coral Reef Ecosystem Studies (CREST) Project website.
Our partners are numerous and include:
- U.S. Coral Reef Task Force (USCRTF)
- Department of the Interior
- Other Federal Partners
- State Partners
- Territorial and Commonwealth Partners
- Guam Division of Aquatic and Wildlife Resources
- Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands Department of Land and Natural Resources
- American Samoa Department of Marine and Wildlife Resources
- Puerto Rico Department of Natural and Environmental Resources
- U.S. Virgin Islands Department of Planning and Natural Resources
- Academia
- University of California Santa Cruz - Institute of Marine Sciences
- University of Western Australia - Oceans Institute
- University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez - Center for Applied Ocean Science & Engineering
- University of Hawaiʻi - Hawaiʻi Institute of Marine Biology
- Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution - Department of Geology and Geophysics
- Delft University of Technology - Department of Hydraulic Engineering
- Queen's University - Department of Civil Engineering
- University of Cantabria - Department of Sciences and Techniques in Water and Environment
- Non-governmental Organizations
Below are data releases associated with this project.
Below are multimedia items associated with this project.
Below is a list of our project publications.
Coastal circulation and water column properties along Kaloko-Honokohau National Historical Park, Hawaii. Part 1: Measurements of waves, currents, temperature, salinity and turbidity, April-October 2004
Coastal circulation and sediment dynamics along west Maui, Hawaii. Part IV: Measurements of waves, currents, temperature, salinity and turbidity in Honolua Bay, northwest Maui: 2003-2004
Biological survey in support of the USGS turbidity and sediment baseline survey on South Moloka’i reef flat, April 2005
A model for wave control on coral breakage and species distribution in the Hawaiian Islands
Possible modes of coral-reef development at Molokai, Hawaii, inferred from seismic-reflection profiling
Application of GPS drifters to track Hawaiian coral spawning
Holocene reef development where wave energy reduces accommodation
Coastal circulation and sediment dynamics along West Maui, Hawaii: Part III: Flow and particulate dynamics during the 2003 summer coral spawning season
Holocene reef accretion: southwest Molokai, Hawaii, U.S.A.
El Nino influence on Holocene reef accretion in Hawai'i
Sediment resuspension and transport patterns on a fringing reef flat, Molokai, Hawaii
Wave- and tidally-driven flow and sediment flux across a fringing coral reef: Southern Molokai, Hawaii
Below are news stories associated with this project.
USGS Investigations of coral reefs are cooperative efforts, and our scientists are working in partnership and cooperation with the following organizations.
- Overview
Explore the fascinating undersea world of coral reefs. Learn how we map, monitor, and model coral reefs so we can better understand, protect, and preserve our Nation's reefs.
Coral reefs are unique ecosystems of plants, animals, and their associated geological framework. Coral reefs cover less than 0.5 percent of the earth's surface, but are home to an estimated 25 percent of all marine species. Second only to tropical rainforests in size and complexity, some scientists estimate that more than one million species of plants and animals are associated with coral reefs. Coral reefs are also of great economic importance to those who live on or visit islands in the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. Reefs shelter and provide nursery grounds for many commercially and culturally important species of fish and invertebrates, they protect the islands' harbors, beaches, and shorelines from erosion and wave damage by storms, and they are vital to the marine tourism industry. These diverse ecosystems provide valuable goods and services worth about $4 billion each year to the U.S.’s coastal communities. Yet, as important as coral reefs are, these ecosystems are being threatened worldwide.
More than 8,500 square miles (22,000 square kilometers) of coral reef habitat is found in U.S. waters. Most of these coral reefs still appear to be relatively healthy, but some areas of dead and dying coral have been found in recent years. The causes of this degradation are poorly known, but are probably in part related to human activities.
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), working closely with academic institutions, state, and other Federal agencies, is spearheading an effort to better understand the geologic and oceanographic controls on the structure and processes of our Nation's coral reef ecosystems.
This web site is a gateway to USGS studies of coral reefs. We focus on the geophysical processes that influence the health and sustainability of coral reefs. From this work we are gaining new insight into the structure of coral reefs, providing the basis for future monitoring, and understanding better both the influences of natural processes and impacts of human activities on coral reef health. These efforts will help to preserve and protect the biodiversity, health, and social and economic value of these remarkable habitats.
Read more coral reef facts.
Learn about our current studies by topic.
Climate Change and Land-use Histories
We are developing new and unique oceanographic and environmental archives from coral skeleton records to better understand the compounding effects of land-use and environmental change on coral reef health.
We are conducting geophysical and geochemical research to address questions about coastal groundwater-to-reef flow and coral reef health, with the goal of informing management decisions related to planning and implementing activities in priority watershed-coral reef systems.
Reef Hydrodynamics and Sediment Processes
We are developing a better understanding how tides, waves, currents, and both land- and reef-derived sediment influence the development of coral reefs and their adjacent shorelines.
Role of Reefs in Coastal Protection
We are combining ocean, engineering, ecologic, social, and economic modeling to provide a high-resolution, rigorous, spatially-explicit valuation of the coastal flood protection benefits provided by coral reefs and the cost effectiveness of reef restoration for enhancing those benefits.
Reef Resource Assessments - Planning for the Future
We are mapping and assessing all of the important geologic and oceanographic factors to identify those coral reefs most at risk and those reefs that are potentially the most resilient and the most likely to recover from natural and human-driven impacts.
Also, learn about our studies by location:
- Guam
- Hawai‛i
- Kaho‛olawe
- Kaua‛i
- Kwajalein Island
- Lāna‛i
- Maui
- Moloka‛i
- O‛ahu
- Puerto Rico
- Roi-Namur Island
- Tutuila
Please also see the associated Coral Reef Ecosystem Studies (CREST) Project website.
Our partners are numerous and include:
- U.S. Coral Reef Task Force (USCRTF)
- Department of the Interior
- Other Federal Partners
- State Partners
- Territorial and Commonwealth Partners
- Guam Division of Aquatic and Wildlife Resources
- Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands Department of Land and Natural Resources
- American Samoa Department of Marine and Wildlife Resources
- Puerto Rico Department of Natural and Environmental Resources
- U.S. Virgin Islands Department of Planning and Natural Resources
- Academia
- University of California Santa Cruz - Institute of Marine Sciences
- University of Western Australia - Oceans Institute
- University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez - Center for Applied Ocean Science & Engineering
- University of Hawaiʻi - Hawaiʻi Institute of Marine Biology
- Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution - Department of Geology and Geophysics
- Delft University of Technology - Department of Hydraulic Engineering
- Queen's University - Department of Civil Engineering
- University of Cantabria - Department of Sciences and Techniques in Water and Environment
- Non-governmental Organizations
- Science
- Data
Below are data releases associated with this project.
Filter Total Items: 22No Result Found - Multimedia
Below are multimedia items associated with this project.
- Publications
Below is a list of our project publications.
Filter Total Items: 163Coastal circulation and water column properties along Kaloko-Honokohau National Historical Park, Hawaii. Part 1: Measurements of waves, currents, temperature, salinity and turbidity, April-October 2004
No abstract available.AuthorsCurt D. Storlazzi, M. Katherine PrestoCoastal circulation and sediment dynamics along west Maui, Hawaii. Part IV: Measurements of waves, currents, temperature, salinity and turbidity in Honolua Bay, northwest Maui: 2003-2004
High-resolution measurements of waves, currents, water levels, temperature, salinity and turbidity were made in Honolua Bay, northwest Maui, Hawaii, during 2003 and 2004 to better understand coastal dynamics in coral reef habitats. Measurements were acquired through two different collection methods. Two hydrographic survey cruises were conducted to acquire spatially-extensive, but temporally-limitAuthorsCurt D. Storlazzi, M. Kathy PrestoBiological survey in support of the USGS turbidity and sediment baseline survey on South Moloka’i reef flat, April 2005
No abstract available.AuthorsK. S. Rodgers, P. L. Jokiel, W. R. Smith, F. Farrell, K. UchinoA model for wave control on coral breakage and species distribution in the Hawaiian Islands
The fringing reef off southern Molokai, Hawaii, is currently being studied as part of a multi-disciplinary project led by the US Geological Survey. As part of this study, modeling and field observations were utilized to help understand the physical controls on reef morphology and the distribution of different coral species. A model was developed that calculates wave-induced hydrodynamic forces onAuthorsC. D. Storlazzi, E.K. Brown, M.E. Field, K. Rodgers, P. L. JokielPossible modes of coral-reef development at Molokai, Hawaii, inferred from seismic-reflection profiling
High-resolution, seismic-reflection data elucidate the late Quaternary development of the largest coral-reef complex in the main Hawaiian Islands. Six acoustic facies were identified from reflection characteristics and lithosome geometry. An extensive, buried platform with uniformly low relief was traced beneath fore-reef and marginal shelf environments. This highly reflective surface dips gentlyAuthorsW. A. Barnhardt, B. M. Richmond, E. E. Grossman, P. HartApplication of GPS drifters to track Hawaiian coral spawning
No abstract available.AuthorsGerald A. Hatcher, Thomas E. Reiss, Curt D. StorlazziHolocene reef development where wave energy reduces accommodation
Analyses of 32 drill cores obtained from the windward reef of Kailua Bay, Oahu, Hawaii, indicate that high wave energy significantly reduced accommodation space for reef development in the Holocene and produced variable architecture because of the combined influence of sea-level history and wave exposure over a complex antecedent topography. A paleostream valley within the late Pleistocene insulaAuthorsEric E. Grossman, Charles H. FletcherCoastal circulation and sediment dynamics along West Maui, Hawaii: Part III: Flow and particulate dynamics during the 2003 summer coral spawning season
High-resolution measurements of currents, temperature, salinity and turbidity were made over the course of three months off West Maui in the summer and early fall of 2003 to better understand coastal dynamics in coral reef habitats. Measurements were made through the emplacement of a series of bottom-mounted instruments in water depths less than 11 m. The studies were conducted in support of the UAuthorsCurt D. Storlazzi, Michael E. Field, Andrea S. Ogston, Joshua B. Logan, M. Kathy Presto, Dave G. GonzalesHolocene reef accretion: southwest Molokai, Hawaii, U.S.A.
Two reef systems off south Molokai, Hale O Lono and Hikauhi (separated by only 10 km), show strong and fundamental differences in modern ecosystem structure and Holocene accretion history that reflect the influence of wave-induced near-bed shear stresses on reef development in Hawaii. Both sites are exposed to similar impacts from south, Kona, and trade-wind swell. However, the Hale O Lono site isAuthorsMary S. Engels, Charles H. Fletcher, Michael E. Field, Curt D. Storlazzi, Eric E. Grossman, John J.B. Rooney, Christopher L. Conger, Craig GlennEl Nino influence on Holocene reef accretion in Hawai'i
New observations of reef accretion from several locations show that in Hawai'i accretion during early to middle Holocene time occurred in areas where today it is precluded by the wave regime, suggesting an increase in wave energy. Accretion of coral and coralline algae reefs in the Hawaiian Islands today is largely controlled by wave energy. Many coastal areas in the main Hawaiian Islands are periAuthorsJ. Rooney, C. Fletcher, E. Grossman, M. Engels, M. FieldSediment resuspension and transport patterns on a fringing reef flat, Molokai, Hawaii
Corals are known to flourish in various turbid environments around the world. The quantitative distinction between clear and turbid water in coral habitats is not well defined nor are the amount of sediment in suspension and rates of sedimentation used to evaluate the condition of reef environments well established. This study of sediment resuspension, transport, and resulting deposition on a frinAuthorsA.S. Ogston, C. D. Storlazzi, M.E. Field, M.K. PrestoWave- and tidally-driven flow and sediment flux across a fringing coral reef: Southern Molokai, Hawaii
The fringing coral reef off the south coast of Molokai, Hawaii is currently being studied as part of a US Geological Survey (USGS) multi-disciplinary project that focuses on geologic and oceanographic processes that affect coral reef systems. For this investigation, four instrument packages were deployed across the fringing coral reef during the summer of 2001 to understand the processes governingAuthorsC. D. Storlazzi, A.S. Ogston, Michael H. Bothner, M.E. Field, M.K. Presto - Web Tools
- News
Below are news stories associated with this project.
Filter Total Items: 17 - Partners
USGS Investigations of coral reefs are cooperative efforts, and our scientists are working in partnership and cooperation with the following organizations.
Filter Total Items: 22