We've got these remarkable, smart people, solving a problem here with seagrass, and a problem over here with shoreline degradation. But how do we bring that all together into restoring at not just one environmental level, but at a seascape level?
We bring all of those elements together as “Project Restore”. Project restore is amongst the first, globally, to move beyond habitat-by-habitat restoration, to provide an example of how multi-habitat restoration can be conducted at seascape scale.
The Sydney Institute of Marine Science has been really fortunate to recently be awarded a major grant through the Department of Environment and Planning in New South Wales, which is funded by the Environmental Trust of New South Wales.
They have got a program called Seabirds for Seascapes. Half of that program is looking at seal and penguin colonies, primarily run out of Taronga Zoo, with some other partners.
The other half of the project is marine restoration at scale within Sydney Harbour. So the way we're approaching that is taking those really amazing unique programs, and bringing them all together.
Project Restore has four elements:
So it gives us time to bring in marine life’s native environments, things like seagrasses, it gives them places to live and to spawn. We put in some fish habitats just next to the Opera House, and the original ones we did, the first ones, we then found White’s seahorse, Sydney seahorses on those structures next to the Opera House. That is as far west as they've ever been recorded in the harbor. So again, just a little bit of a helping hand, and the ecology starts to take care of itself.
Project restore is amongst the first, globally, to move beyond habitat-by-habitat restoration, to provide an example of how multi-habitat restoration can be conducted at seascape scale.
We've got these remarkable, smart people, solving a problem here with seagrass, and a problem over here with shoreline degradation. But how do we bring that all together into restoring at not just one environmental level, but at a seascape level?
We bring all of those elements together as “Project Restore”. Project restore is amongst the first, globally, to move beyond habitat-by-habitat restoration, to provide an example of how multi-habitat restoration can be conducted at seascape scale.
The Sydney Institute of Marine Science has been really fortunate to recently be awarded a major grant through the Department of Environment and Planning in New South Wales, which is funded by the Environmental Trust of New South Wales.
They have got a program called Seabirds for Seascapes. Half of that program is looking at seal and penguin colonies, primarily run out of Taronga Zoo, with some other partners.
The other half of the project is marine restoration at scale within Sydney Harbour. So the way we're approaching that is taking those really amazing unique programs, and bringing them all together.
Project Restore has four elements:
So it gives us time to bring in marine life’s native environments, things like seagrasses, it gives them places to live and to spawn. We put in some fish habitats just next to the Opera House, and the original ones we did, the first ones, we then found White’s seahorse, Sydney seahorses on those structures next to the Opera House. That is as far west as they've ever been recorded in the harbor. So again, just a little bit of a helping hand, and the ecology starts to take care of itself.
Project restore is amongst the first, globally, to move beyond habitat-by-habitat restoration, to provide an example of how multi-habitat restoration can be conducted at seascape scale.
In Sydney Harbour, certainly upriver, nearly 100% of the natural shoreline has been transformed to artificial shorelines. This remarkable restoration project seeks to bring natural shoreline and marine biodiversity back
The marine life of the Sydney Harbour got to a low in the 1960s and 1970s, but we've seen an improvement in the last 50 years, with a growing abundance of marine life in the harbour.
Crayweeds are a type of seaweed in Sydney harbour and surrounds that are like ecological foundations in our marine environment. If you take that away, everything else goes. If you bring that back, then everything else comes back with it. That is the goal of operation Crayweed.
An incredible project in the heart of Sydney harbour aims to save one of the world's two endangered species of Seahorse - the beautiful, tiny, White's seahorse.
Sign up to keep in touch with articles, updates, events or news from Kuno, your platform for nature