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Inside Our Coral Farming Method: Growing Reefs with Precision

Inside Our Coral Farming Method: Growing Reefs with Precision

Restoring coral reefs isn’t a guessing game, it’s a process rooted in biology, patience, and purpose. On Gili Air, the team at Indo Coral Conservation runs a coral farming program that goes beyond the basics. It’s not just about planting coral, it’s about cultivating resilience beneath the waves.

🔍 What Is Coral Farming?

Coral farming involves growing coral fragments in a controlled environment before transplanting them to degraded reef sites. By nurturing these fragments in a dedicated nursery, we help them reach a healthy size and condition that maximizes their survival once reintroduced to the wild.

Think of it like a greenhouse for the sea, except instead of vegetables, we’re growing future homes for fish, invertebrates, and entire ecosystems.

🧪 Why Microfragmentation?

Indo Coral’s signature technique is microfragmentation, a method that accelerates coral growth by cutting colonies into tiny pieces. These fragments heal rapidly and begin to fuse together, forming robust clusters that mimic natural reef patterns.

Developed by scientists and tested in various restoration projects worldwide, microfragmentation allows us to restore coral at a faster pace than traditional methods. It’s especially effective for massive coral species, which typically grow slowly on their own.

⚙️ How Our Farm Works

Our coral farm includes mounted substrates: flat plates and racks designed to hold fragments securely while allowing water flow and nutrient exchange. Interns assist in fragmenting corals, monitoring growth, and maintaining the nursery’s cleanliness to prevent disease or algae buildup.

We also track fragment recovery and fusion rates using simple data sheets and underwater photography. Each coral is logged and observed over weeks and months, creating a living database of reef health and restoration success.

🌱 Choosing Coral for Farming

We source coral ethically, only taking cuttings from healthy donor colonies and always leaving the parent colony intact. We focus on species that are hardy, fast-growing, and already present in Gili Matra Marine National Park, such as:

  • Acropora (branching corals with fast growth and reef-building potential)
  • Pocillopora (compact, resilient coral with high survival rates)
  • Montipora (plating coral that adds structure and shade to the reef)

By working with native species, we reduce ecological risk and ensure the farm supports reef biodiversity rather than altering it.

👥 Who Maintains the Coral Farm?

Our team includes marine biologists, marine biology interns and trained dive professionals. Maintenance includes cleaning substrates, monitoring fish activity, checking for disease, and re-fragmenting coral as needed.

🤝 From Farm to Reef

Once coral fragments reach a healthy size and show fusion, we carefully transplant them to designated reef sites identified through prior surveys. These “restoration zones” are areas damaged by storms, anchors, or heat stress, and have the right conditions for regrowth.

Transplants are mounted to underwater frames or directly on natural substrate. We revisit each site regularly to evaluate survival, fish return, and signs of natural spawning.

📣 Successes & Challenges

We’ve seen promising results and many transplant sites are teeming with life just months after installation. Some zones show signs of coral larvae settling naturally, suggesting the restoration is working as a spark for reef recovery.

But it’s not always smooth sailing. Algal blooms, fish predation, or warm water surges can set progress back. That’s why farming coral is a constant process, not just a one-off project.

🚀 Join the Effort

If you’re passionate about reef recovery, there are plenty of ways to join:

  • Volunteer on the farm for a few days or weeks.
  • Take our Coral Restoration Course and learn the full method.
  • Donate to help fund tools, nursery expansion, and transplant missions.

Every coral counts and every set of hands moves the mission forward.

🔗 Useful Links

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What is BRUV – Baited Remote Underwater Video method?

A camera is placed on the seafloor with bait positioned in front. It records fish that come to investigate over a set time. Footage is reviewed later to identify species and behavior. It’s a passive method like setting a camera trap for marine life.

In short: BRUV = film fish attracted to bait, then analyze the video later.

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What is UVC – Underwater Visual Census method?

Divers swim along a transect line and visually record all fish seen within a defined area. They note species, size, and numbers during the dive. It’s a live fish count. Like taking attendance in a moving classroom.

In short: UVC = spot and count fish by eye while swimming the transect.

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What is Belt Transect method?

A measuring tape is laid out along the reef. In our case divers count all visible invertebrates (e.g. sea cucumbers, starfish) within a set belt width usually 1 or 2 meters. They record species and numbers while swimming slowly along the line. It’s a wide-area visual count like sweeping a corridor for invertebrates.

In short: Belt = count all invertebrates within a set zone along the tape.

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What is 3D Coral Monitoring method?

Divers take multiple photos of coral structures from different angles. Photos are processed using software to build a 3D model of the coral. This model shows shape, size, and changes over time. It’s like creating a digital twin of the coral to track its growth.

In short: 3D = capture coral from all sides, then build a model to monitor changes.

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What is UPT – Underwater Photo Transect method?

A measuring tape is also laid out along the reef. Instead of recording points manually, divers take overlapping photos along the line. These images are later analyzed on a computer to assess coverage and species. It’s a visual capture method like scanning the reef with a camera for later analysis.

In short: UPT = record the whole transect with photos, then analyze later.

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What is PIT – Point Intercept Transect method?

A measuring tape is laid out along the reef. Divers record what’s directly under specific points at fixed intervals (e.g. every 10 cm). It’s a manual, visual sampling method. Like checking what’s beneath each tick mark on a ruler. Data is written down underwater, point by point.

In short: PIT = record what’s under each point by eye, underwater.