Reef Relief was founded in Key West, Florida, in 1987 by Craig Quirolo, then
a charterboat captain and currently Reef Reliefs Director of Marine and
International Projects.
Today, it is one of the worlds leading grassroots, non-profit coral reef membership organizations and has achieved numerous awards and recognitions for its efforts.
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On This Page:
- Reef Relief Program Goals for 2007
- Reef Relief celebrates 20 years
- Major Achievements During the Past 20 Years
- Awards
Reef Relief Goals for Fiscal Year July 1, 2007– June 30, 2008
*Coral Reef Conservation Program: Reef Relief is the only organization that focuses exclusively on protecting our coral reefs. We provide coral reef education via a multi-media approach of efforts in the Florida Keys, media, web, internet, special events, and collaborations with existing organizations and businesses. We target user groups such as boaters, divers, fishermen, policymakers, educators, students and media. We are currently preparing our new environmental center at 631 Greene Street for public educational use. Educational coordinator, Brian Henry, is designing interactive multi-media kiosks that focus on coral reefs and how to protect them through sustainable living. He is also participating in children’s summer programs, providing coral reef education at the Boys & Girl’s Club, YMCA, Mel Fisher’s Mer Academy and at special events. We completed our Discover Coral Reefs School Program for 4th grade students in the Monroe County School District in May. Reef Relief staff and volunteers participate in events in the Florida Keys and South Florida and at the state level, such as our Oceans Day booth in Tallahassee. Our website at www.reefrelief.org is regularly updated with Coral Reef News, Science, articles and educational materials that are accessed by thousands of people per day. We send out regular coral reef news to our online community of 4500. Reef Relief produces educational tools for teachers such as a new online course entitled “Endangered Coral Reefs,” that can be found on our website. The Reef Line newsletters provides updates on coral reef issues and Reef Relief news and is mailed to all members and distributed throughout the Florida Keys.
* Expand the Online Archive of the Coral Photo Monitoring Survey at www.reefrelief.org. Craig Quirolo has been scanning and posting slides and photographs and adding recent digital images to an online archive of images of coral reefs from the Florida Keys and Caribbean. It depicts how coral reefs are affected over time by disease, algal overabundance, bleaching and storm damage. Reef Relief is unique in that we have documented change on the reef at Key West-area reefs over the past 20 years-- a vital period when many new coral diseases emerged, providing long term field data to the growing number of scientists seeking to determine the causes of coral diseases as well as educators, students, media and the general public. This year, Craig will add an additional images to the existing archive of over 10,000 images, make it easier to navigate the site, and add additional content such as scientific studies that have resulted from this documentation and a new section entitled “Featured Dive” which changes regularly. Thousands visit this website on a daily basis.
* The Clean Water Campaign seeks to improve water quality through various targets such as establishment of a Keys-wide No Discharge Zone for boater sewage (including federal waters of the sanctuary), advanced wastewater and stormwater treatment throughout the Florida Keys, and reduction of agricultural runoff from the Everglades/Florida Bay. For the past year, we have been supporting the designation of Elkhorn and Staghorn corals to the U.S. Endangered Species list, providing recommendations for adoption of a strong habitat conservation plan that will encourage federal authorities to pursue the clean water issues noted above. We are increasing efforts to launch sustainable living initiatives to combat global warming as it is exacerbating the extent and impact of coral diseases and bleaching and collaborating with the Florida Ocean and Coastal Coalition on statewide reef issues.
* Bahamas Programs: Reef Relief operates the Captain Roland Roberts House Environmental Center in New Plymouth, Green Turtle Cay, in the Abaco, Bahamas–Key West’s sister city. The center supports operations for our system of reef mooring buoys that protect the area’s coral reefs. We have begun an aluminum recycling program on the island and plan to expand it to reusable shopping bags this year to reduce the use of plastic. In the coming year, we hope to be able to train a local person to maintain the buoys and hire a local manager for the environmental center so that the program is locally sustainable.
Reef Relief Celebrates 20 years of Grassroots Efforts to Protect Coral Reefs
This year, Reef Relief will celebrate our 20th year of grassroots efforts to protect coral reefs. From our headquarters in Key West, Florida, we have spread word of the importance and value of coral reefs to a wide audience both in the Keys and throughout South Florida and the entire globe, and helped start up similar coral reef efforts throughout the Caribbean.
In the Florida Keys, our annual Reef Awareness Week celebrations, the Discover Coral Reefs School Program, operation of Reef World Environmental Center and numerous special events have put the coral reef at the top of everyone’s concerns. Our extensive website featuring a plethora of information and coral reef educational materials, has provided the means for many others to learn more about the wonderful world of coral reefs. Our online community has benefitted from regular updates on coral reef issues and news.
Reef Relief began in 1987 with the installation of reef mooring buoys in Key West that became a system of 116 buoys at 7 reefs that we maintained for 10 years. Led by founder Craig Quirolo, Reef Relief has created coral nurseries to save storm-damaged corals in the Florida Keys and Bahamas. He has led a 15 year Coral Photo Monitoring Survey of reef health that is currently being loaded onto an online archive at www.reefrelief.org. This survey has led to the discovery of several new coral diseases. Craig has worked with Reef Relief’s Scientific Advisory Board and numerous other researchers to identify the causes of decline at the reef. This past March he was coauthored on a scientific publication that studied the spread of aspergillosis, a common soil-based fungus that has adapted to the saltwater environment and is now attacking Purple Sea Fans.
We have supported the creation of marine protected areas such as the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, the Negril (Jamaica) Marine Park, and established the Key West Marine Park in cooperation with the City of Key West. We’ve helped install buoys and establish programs throughout the Caribbean, including mooring buoys, a coral survey and operation of the volunteer-staffed Captain Roland Roberts House Environmental Center in Green Turtle Cay in the Abaco, Bahamas.
Our Clean Water Campaign has led the effort to identify sewage contamination, agricultural runoff, cruise ships, boats, and other sources of pollution that are affecting water quality at coral reefs in South Florida and around the globe. We have studied the issues, identified solutions, and guided policy development through implementation for a range that includes advanced, nutrient stripping waste treatment for the City of Key West, establishment of a boater No Discharge Zone in the Florida Keys, passage of a phosphate ban for laundry detergents, approval of bans on offshore oil drilling and exploration for South Florida, increased state standards for shallow injection wells, and a host of other actions. Reef Relief has been a watchdog for coral reefs. Today we are working to gain added protection by adding corals to the U.S. Endangered Species List that will hopefully trigger additional protections at the federal level.
Our wonderful board of directors, members, volunteers, interns, sponsors, and foundations have all helped make these achievements possible. We have been fortunate to have accomplished so much with such a small, but dedicated staff, who also deserve our gratitude for years of effort. Thank you all! Together, we will continue to be a major force for coral reefs!Major Achievements During the Past 20 Years:
Key West Reef Mooring Buoy Program:
Protected Key West's coral reefs from the enormous local fleet of charterboats by installing and maintaining 116 mooring buoys at six Key West-area coral reefs for a period of 10 years. This was the largest privately-maintained system in the world and was recently incorporated into the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary Reef Mooring Buoy Action Plan.
Clean Water Campaign:
Spearheaded a campaign to improve water quality in the Florida Keys. Reef Relief was a major supporter of the effort to create the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary including the first Water Quality Protection Program of any sanctuary, and has worked to upgrade Florida Keys sewage treatment systems to the highest level of treatment currently available, including drafting legislation to designate Key Wests waters as a No Discharge Zone for boater sewage, pass a ban for phosphate detergents, and ban offshore oil development in the Keys.
Jamaica Coral Reef Protection Program:
In November of 1991, Reef Relief worked with the Negril Coral Reef Preservation Society (NCRPS) to install 35 reef mooring buoys at the reefs of Negril, Jamaica. In subsequent years, Reef Relief returned to train local preservationists to patrol their reefs with the Reef Ranger Program, maintain the buoys, install a swimmers lane, launch a Junior Ranger school program, and create the Negril Marine Park, managed by NCRPS.
Coral Reef Conservation Program:
Reef Relief maintains the Environmental Education Center in Key West and educates Florida residents and visitors and others around the world on the benefits and methods of protecting the reef ecosystem. The multi-media campaign includes an extensive website at , brochures, special events such as Reef Awareness Week, the Discover Coral Reefs School Program, signage, documentary films, radio public service announcements and participation in global events.
Coral Photo Monitoring Survey:
Since 1987, Reef Relief's founder Craig Quirolo has monitored the reef growth and health of many coral reefs near Key West on a slide and video format that has led to the discovery of several new diseases. This information is shared with the worlds leading coral reef scientists, providing them a continuous stream of detailed reef health data that is invaluable in their studies of coral disease and incorporated into Reef Relief educational programs to keep the public informed as to the status of coral reefs. The survey has been expanded to coral reefs in Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Mexico, and the Bahamas.
Guanaja, Bay Islands, Honduras Project:
Reef Relief in cooperation with the Guanaja Tourism association, installed 36 reef mooring buoys to protect the fragile coral reefs surrounding the island of Guanaja, a popular dive destination off the coast of Honduras. They survived recent hurricane activity and are available for use to eliminate anchor damage by boats. Educational charts educate divers to the reefs.
Coral Nursery Project:
In 1998, working in conjunction with Harold Hudson of the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, Reef Relief established a Coral Nursery at Western Sambo Reef in the Lower Keys that salvaged storm damaged corals, secured them to the ocean bottom and elevated them so that they may survive. They were recently used to restore a boat grounding site.
The Bahamas Project:
Reef Relief is implementing a coral reef conservation plan in the Bahamas that includes educational programs, reef mooring buoy installations, zoning of marine protected areas with demarcation buoys and implementation of advanced wastewater treatment. Reef Relief has begun a Coral Nursery in the Abacos to salvage storm-damaged corals, especially endangered Acropora palmate that grows only in the Caribbean. They are elevated and secured to the ocean bottom to insure their survival from sedimentation and movement in subsequent storms.
The Cuba Project:
Since 1998, Reef Relief has worked with Cuban scientists to survey the health of the Cuban coral reefs. While the Cuban embargo has impeded practical solutions like buoys, Reef Reliefs support of environmental education and surveys of coral reefs in collaboration with Cuban scientists helps Cuban conservation efforts.
Sharing our knowledge and experience with Coralations
REEF RELIEF is happy to information share. In 1996, we helped Coralations, a non-profit organization dedicated to preserving Puerto Rico's coral reefs, get started by helping to organize a workshop in Puerto Rico on coral reef protection. Our educational materials are used (with proper credit going to REEF RELIEF for their use) as guidelines for their educational materials. We share with Coralations and many other community-based groups, our knowledge about our different activities (environmental education, grassroots organizing, reef mooring buoy programs, etc.), so they can take advantage of what we have done right, and avoid certain pitfalls they are sure to encounter along the way.
Awards:
- Point of Light Award, 1990

On Earth Day, April 22, 1990, President George H.W. Bush singled out Reef Relief as his 123rd "Point of Light," for its success in turning the Keys' attitude towards their reef into one of informed stewardship.- Click here to read a transcript of the President's remarks.
- REEF RELIEF efforts have been recognized with numerous local, state and national awards, including the 1996 President's Council on Sustainable Development, Take Pride in America, Take Pride in Florida, 1994, 1995, 1996 Renew America, 1995 Governor's Environmental Achievement Award, 1991 Rodale's Scuba Diving First Environmental Achievement Award, and others from local organizations including the Key West Jaycees, Last Stand, the Chamber of Commerce, and the Key West Hotel Motel Association. Most of all, we have the members, volunteers, and supporters of REEF RELIEF to thank for our ability to achieve protection for Florida's coral reefs.



