Coral Microbial Ecology Team Participates in Mesophotic and Deep Benthic Communities (MDBC) Restoration Expedition in the Gulf of America
SPCMSC scientists Christina Kellogg and Julie Voelschow will go to sea from August 27–Sept 10, 2024, on the LUMCON research vessel Pelican as part of the Coral Propagation Technique Development Project, a part of the MDBC Restoration effort. Kellogg and Voelschow will collect and preserve samples of multiple species of mesophotic octocorals to generate benchmark microbiome data.
The MDBC are vast and complex ecosystems on the ocean floor that are a foundation of Gulf of America food webs. More than 770 square miles of deep-sea habitat and 4 square miles of mesophotic habitat were injured by the Deepwater Horizon (DWH) oil spill. The most direct approach to restoring MDBC is to facilitate the growth of new corals of the same species as those damaged by the DWH oil spill. The objective of this pilot project is to develop techniques that can be used for direct restoration of MDBC at a scale that is meaningful relative to the injury to these communities. The project proposes both field and lab work to test a variety of methods and substrates to enhance coral recruitment and growth, and to test a variety of coral propagation techniques, including fragmentation and transplantation.