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Iโd been home for six months when the email arrived: โWith the help of photosynthetic algae and guard crabs, sufficient sunlight, and the right temperature, Betsy Andrews managed to grow exceptionally well. Almost all of your corals have doubled in size.โ
No, this wasnโt some sort of Little Mermaid cosplay. It was an update on the coral colony Iโd planted โ and tagged with my own name โ in the Indian Ocean, just off the beach at Velaa Private Island. My installation is one of many aimed at helping to reverse a die-off that is happening not only in the Maldives, but across the globe.
Courtsey of Velaa Private Island
The coral guardian program at Velaa is one of many urgent reef-restoration projects taking place at resorts across this nation of 1,192 tiny islands. In the Maldives, coral is everything. It supports the fish that people eat. It protects beaches from erosion. Itโs the very ground underfoot โ and the foundation of the economy. โPeople from all over the world come to these beautiful reefs to dive and snorkel,โ says Agnฤ Griciลซtฤ, Velaaโs marine biologist. โAnd, unfortunately, the reef is in trouble.โ
Courtsey of Velaa Private Island
Iโd gotten a closer look at the situation on my visit to Velaa, when I went out for a series of scuba dives with the resortโs dive master, Marta Pasztorova. We saw massive walls and pinnacles of corals shaped like boulders, fans, and antlers. Schools of blue triggerfish and five-striped bass streamed down their sides. Moray eels and groupers peeked from their crevices. Sharks and rays glided by. Napoleons stopped at grooming stations to have their anvil-shaped heads nibbled on by tiny gobies. And a zillion other colorful, oddball fish went about their business on the reef.
Markus Gortz/Courtsey of Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
But all of that was at 60 feet down. Closer to shore the picture wasnโt as rosy. โYou know what bleaching is?โ Griciลซtฤ asked. โCoral is an animal, like humans. When itโs too hot, it dehydrates.โ And thatโs just as problematic for coral as it would be for people. When overheated, coral expels the colorful single-celled organisms that live on it. These zooxanthellae, as they are called, convert energy from the sun into nutrients for the coral; without them, coral turns white and begins to starve. Bleaching can be periodic, following events such as El Niรฑo, which can create especially hot, dry weather.ย
โHowever, if conditions improve โ if temperature and ultraviolet light are reduced โ the zooxanthellae return, bringing back the color, and some corals survive,โ Griciลซtฤ explained.
Restoration is aimed at multiplying these survivors, since, the theory goes, they must have adapted themselves to the new warmer conditions.
Courtesy of Reefscapers
Griciลซtฤ led me out to a table in the sand, where an intern, Henry Garber, had set some zip ties, a bucket of sea water filled with coral fragments, and a rebar frame in the shape of an eagle ray. We tied 15 fragments to the frame. Then we hopped in a boat and motored out to a nursery in 30 feet of water, well removed from the larger reef โ and any coral-munching parrot fish or cushion stars. Garber donned a tank and took the frame down to the seabed as Griciลซtฤ and I watched from the surface with snorkel gear on.
The current El Niรฑo, which began in early 2023, has impacted 70 percent of the planetโs coral reefs, in 67 countries. Itโs the second such event in a decade; the previous one, from 2014 to 2017, was what spurred Velaa and other Maldives properties toย act.
Dan Kullberg/Courtsey of Soneva
โResorts have the responsibility to protect their house reef,โ said Arnfinn Oines, of the Soneva Foundation, which supports coral restoration at Soneva Fushi. Guests can tour a lab maintained by the nonprofit Coralive, where coral reproduces and grows in controlled conditions before itโs mature enough to be placed in the sea. Offshore is one of the worldโs largest underwater nurseries that use mineral accretion technology, or MAT, a weak electrical current that causes limestone to collect on frames, which encourages coral to grow up to three times faster.
Courtsey of Velaa Private Island
At the Four Seasons Resort Maldives at Landaa Giraavaru, the nonprofit Reefscapers has planted more than half a million new corals. Guests can also get involved in projects at resorts such as Sheraton Maldives Full Moon Resort & Spa, Siyam World Maldives, Baros Maldives, and the St. Regis Maldives Vommuli, where Reefscapers just launched a newย nursery.
Though pitching in while on vacation may feel like a drop in the bucket, the scientists and advocates I spoke with said every effort matters. โThe goal is not just creating more coral cover, but creating opportunities for corals to adapt,โ says Coralive founder Ahmad โAkiโ Allahgoli. โWe have to plant as many corals as possible โ and we canโt do that byย ourselves.โ
Paddling around Velaaโs lagoon, our masks in the water, Griciลซtฤ and I examined other methods her team is trying: stainless-steel ropes hung with growing coral; MAT-wired frames; PVC trays for nurturing soft coral. Then she pointed out some metal adoption tags tucked amid coral hillocks swarming with fish. These robust swaths of reef had grown from fragments like the ones I hadย planted.ย
Back home, flipping through photos of my own colony, I noticed that itโs on the way to similar maturity, as the reef around Velaa is nursed back to health.ย
A version of this story first appeared in the November 2024 issue of Travel + Leisure under the headline “Under the Sea.”