Skip to main content
Skip to main content
Date
Managed Area
Topic
Yale Students Study Mangrove Restoration at Rookery Bay

Four students from Yale University, Nico Theunissen, Isabella Chiaravalloti, Mingyu Zhang and Rocco D'Ascanio, recently visited Rookery Bay Research Reserve to study the Fruit Farm Creek mangrove restoration site. Guided by Research Coordinator Nerea Ubierna and Stewardship Coordinator Jared Franklin, the team explored both the land and surrounding waters to better understand how the restored mangroves are functioning.  

Tomoka Marsh Aquatic Preserve Partners with Local Organizations to Install Living Shoreline at Tomoka State Park

The Tomoka Marsh Aquatic Preserve (TMAP) recently partnered with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), the University of Central Florida’s Coastal & Estuarine Ecology Lab (CEELAB), DEP's Tomoka State Park, the Marine Discovery Center (MDC) and the Coastal Conservation Association (CCA) Florida to install a living shoreline aimed at restoring and protecting critical coastal habitat within the preserve. The collab

Completion of Project GreenShores

For the past five years, Northwest Florida Aquatic Preserve has been working on a grant funded by Deepwater Horizon Program’s Natural Resource Damage Assessment (NRDA) to add additional plantings of native vegetation to the islands at Project GreenShores II, place informational signage, remove invasive species and debris, and conduct monitoring.  

Charlotte Harbor Aquatic Preserve’s Biannual Refresher for Water Quality Volunteers

CHAP staff, along with the help from regional coordinating offices Estero Bay AP and Cedar Point Environmental Park, hosted the biannual volunteer training. Known as the Quality Assurance (QA) training, it serves as a refresher for samplers as well as offers time to condition instruments, sample for accuracy from the same waterbody and give program updates.  

Rookery Bay Staff & Volunteers Join International Coastal Cleanup Day

On International Coastal Cleanup Day, Rookery Bay staff and volunteers met at Shell Island Road (SIR) within the reserve for a successful cleanup effort. The morning began with just a few participants, but the group quickly grew to include more than a dozen volunteers, staff and students from Florida Gulf Coast University.

New Volunteer Program

The GTM Research Reserve (GTMNERR) has launched a new volunteer program. GTM’s Margaret A. Davidson Fellow Meredith Pratt is training volunteers for a new long-term fisheries monitoring program and leading them through their first sampling protocol. The first training session began with a brief presentation about the importance of fisheries monitoring and information on how to sample monthly.