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Learning about coral reefs at Jacques Cousteau's Underwater Reserve


About 25% of the world's fish (over 4,000 species!) live on coral reefs, and they provide more than 450 million people with food and income. Reefs create islands through the accumulation of sand and sediment, providing homes to people, birds, and turtles, and they provide shelter so that delicate seagrass beds and mangrove habitats can thrive.

Yet coral reefs are dying. Already, our planet has lost 27% of this important ocean ecosystem. If present rates of destruction are allowed to continue, 60% of the world's coral reefs will be destroyed over the next 30 years. This would be disastrous, and not only for ocean life. In poor communities, fishing over reefs provides about 50% of the household income to women, making the protection of reefs not only an issue of conservation of biodiversity, but also one of gender equality.

Advice Project Media believes that one of the best way to help youth appreciate the special places we need to protect is to visit them. This is why we held our 2015 Advice Project Media's Global Leadership and Empowerment Summit this past summer in the Peruvian rainforest, and it's why just yesterday, Advice Project visited Jacques Cousteau's Underwater Reserve in Malendure, Guadeloupe. A part of the National Park of Guadeloupe, this marine area covers over 400 hectacres of protected coral reef and Pigeon Islets. There, our students swam over the reefs to observe many species of sea snakes and fish, and they learned a little about how this delicate ecosystem is at risk of dying due to the effects of climate change.

We believe that our teens will return home with a new appreciation for the exquisite beauty of coral reefs, and we also hope that their experience will help them become more vocal about the importance of maintaining the rich biodiversity in our oceans - both for the health of our planet as a whole, and also so that vulnerable people - women in particular - won't feel the deleterious economic effects of climate change.

Below is a short video we shot during our visit to Jacques Cousteau's Underwater Reserve, as well as a few photos. Enjoy!

Special thanks to Caraibe Kayak for outfitting us with the kayaks and snorkeling equipment we used during our day at Jacques Cousteau's Underwater Reserve. Video and photography by Melissa Banigan.

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