Coral reefs support 25 percent of all marine life—and the livelihoods of half a billion humans. Hope for Reefs is a major Academy initiative aiming to reverse the rapid decline of Earth’s reefs in this generation.

In Phase I of Hope for Reefs, launched in 2016, Academy scientists and partners worked tirelessly to understand, protect, and restore global reefs. We were the first to explore some of the Earth’s most little-known “twilight zone” reefs 100-500 feet below the ocean’s surface. We made breakthroughs with the first aquarium-based coral spawning laboratory in the US and piloted innovative conservation strategies. And we touched hearts and minds around the world with inspiring, urgent stories about coral reefs through award-winning exhibits and planetarium shows.

In Phase II, we will go much further, taking this critical work to scale and creating powerful pathways—biodiversity science, environmental learning, and collaborative engagement—to set reefs on a trajectory of resilience and regeneration in our fast-changing world.

Watch and share our new Hope for Reefs video.

A group of scuba divers underwater in the Marshall Islands

Regeneration in action

As oceans grow warmer and more acidic, corals are struggling to reproduce. To promote reproduction, Academy scientists sought to replicate reef conditions in Palau in our Coral Regeneration Lab (CoRL)—and succeeded in becoming the first lab in the US to spawn corals in aquaria. We anticipate significantly refining our techniques to advance coral science and inform and ultimately improve restoration programs worldwide.

Photo © Tane Sinclair-Taylor

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2 orange-spotted filefish next to a coral reef

Biodiversity science

With deep expertise in coral reef research, we’re helping to restore global reef health and resilience through interventions that increase genetic diversity and accelerate restoration of reefs, including breakthrough solutions developed in CoRL and at field sites around the world. Academy scientists continue to conduct the most comprehensive reef surveys to date, from heavily impacted shallow reefs to the largely unexplored mesophotic “twilight zone.”

Photo: Luiz Rocha © California Academy of Sciences

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Students watch a dive show in front of the Philippine Coral Reef exhibit

Environmental learning

Through K-12 education, youth mentorship and training, museum exhibits and programs, and virtual and place-based learning, we are growing a global community that cares and advocates for coral reefs. Across all programming, we are committed to advancing diversity, equity, and inclusion by ensuring that students, scientists, and communities have equitable access to the tools they need, including immersive, engaging content to help educators and families dive deeper into reef science.

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Scientific divers aboard a dive boat in the Marshall Islands

Collaborative engagement

Academy partnerships with coral reef communities in the Philippines and Brazil led to the creation of three new marine protected areas (MPAs)—and momentum is building to establish more. In addition to protecting reefs, we’re also regenerating them: Working with SECORE and other global experts, we developed novel technologies to “seed” thousands of genetically diverse corals onto damaged reefs, which, when deployed, will give these vital ecosystems a fighting chance.

Photo © Tane Sinclair-Taylor

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Our major initiatives
The Academy's mission is to regenerate the natural world through science, learning, and collaboration. Explore the initiatives that will help us achieve it. 
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    Underwater photo of Roatán mesophotic coral reef by Luiz Rocha

    A mesophotic milestone in Roatán

    Academy divers recently conducted the first biodiversity surveys of Roatán's mesophotic reefs outside of a submersible.

    Go deep

    Photo: Luiz Rocha © California Academy of Sciences

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    Orange and white shrimp stands atop a coral in an Academy exhibit

    Hope for Reefs receives UN endorsement

    Our Hope for Reefs initiative made a splash on World Oceans Day: The International Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO named it an official Ocean Decade project!

    Learn more

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    Striking portrait of Cirrhilabrus finifenmaa fish from Maldives

    New species alert!

    Meet the rose-veiled fairy wrasse, a new addition to the tree of life—and the first fish from the Maldives to be described by a local scientist.


    Learn more