Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation

Providing science-based solutions to protect and restore ocean health

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  5. Great Barrier Reef Mission Team

Great Barrier Reef Mission Team


  • Stefan Andrews

    Scientific Diver / Fish Surveyor

  • Bar Ayalon

    Research Assistant / Benthic Surveyor

  • Jonathan Barnes

    Dive Safety Officer

  • Andrew Bruckner, PhD

    Former Chief Scientist of the Living Oceans Foundation

  • Samantha M. Clements

    Benthic Surveyor / Scientific Diver

  • Alexandra Dempsey

    Chief Executive Officer

  • Grace E. Frank

    Researcher / Scientific Diver / Coral Surveyor

  • Jürgen Freund

    Wildlife Photographer

  • Konrad Hughen, Phd

    Senior Scientist / Coral Surveyor

  • Charlie Huveneers, Phd

    Senior Lecturer / Research Assistant / Scientific Diver / Shark Surveyor

  • Valeriya Komyakova

    PhD Student / Fish Surveys

  • Abigail Libbin Cannon

    Coral Surveyor / Scientific Diver

  • Katie Lubarsky

    Masters Student / Fish Surveyor

  • Ken Marks

    Science Diver / Underwater Photographs

  • Anderson Mayfield, PhD

    2013 Research Fellow

  • Kirsty Nash

    Research Associate / Benthic Team

  • Philip Renaud

    Former Executive Director of the Living Oceans Foundation

  • Williams Robbins, PhD

    Research Scientist / Shark Biologist

  • Badi Samaniego

    2012 Research Fellow, Scientific Diver

  • Kristin Stolberg

    Research Assistant / Benthic Surveyor

  • Shanee Stopnitzky

    Benthic Survey Team

  • Brett M. Taylor

    PhD Student / Shark Surveyor


All Updates

Coral Reefs in the South Pacific: A Webinar with SPREP

August 25, 2022

The Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation recently hosted a webinar with our partners at the Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environmental Programme (SPREP). SPREP is an organization established by the governments of Pacific Island nations to protect and manage the environment and natural resources of the Pacific. Their 21 member states (including many we studied on the Global Reef Expedition) work together to achieve healthy and resilient ecosystems and support sustainable development for Pacific communities. Our webinar with SPREP allowed us to share our research findings from the South Pacific directly with people who are actively working to conserve coral reefs and coastal marine ecosystems in the region. This is one of the many ways we are sharing our knowledge and findings from the Global Reef Expedition with the countries and communities in which we worked.

During the webinar, we were able to share information about the work the Foundation completed on the Expedition, including our extensive outreach and education initatives, as well as our scientific findings. We highlighted the programs our education team developed over the course of the Expedition, the many outreach events we held, and provided a comprehensive discussion of the results of our research in the South Pacific as well as our work in the Indian Ocean and Caribbean Sea.

At the end of the presentation, we were able to share our ongoing partnerships and upcoming projects, including our ongoing partnership with the University of Miami to develop a reef resilience model, our partnership with NASA to map the world’s reefs, as well as our numerous education programs such as the Mangrove Education & Restoration Program, Coral Reef Ecology Curriculum, and Science Without Borders® Challenge. Lastly, we shared information about our endorsed UN Ocean Decade Project, Science Without Borders®: Conserving the Tropics, which will use science, outreach, and education to engage local communities to protect their coral reefs, mangrove forests, and seagrass meadows. This project will allow us to build off of our work on the Global Reef Expedition using a co-designed approach to further conservation of tropical coastal marine ecosystems, such as those in the South Pacific.

The webinar was attended by numerous government officials, marine managers, and stakeholders from throughout the South Pacific. Some of the attendees were people we had worked with on the Global Reef Expedition, but many were new and this webinar was a great introduction to the Foundation and our work. There was a great Q&A session at the end where we were able to discuss the findings and share more information about future partnerships.

As we take the work from the Global Reef Expedition to the next level, we are always looking to develop new partnerships to help bring the UN endorsed Science Without Borders® project to communities worldwide. Webinars like this, and partnering with SPREP, are important first steps in the implementation of the Science Without Borders® project and connect us with a network of people who are also working to protect, conserve, and restore ocean health.

What We Learned: Marine Protected Areas Work in Conserving Coral Reefs

December 14, 2021

Managing marine resources is a challenge for communities around the globe. On the Global Reef Expedition, we had the opportunity to visit protected and unprotected reefs in both remote locations and those regularly used by humans. The degree of protection varied, but we found that areas with the highest protection had the healthiest reefs.

Marine protected areas (MPAs) are a tool commonly used by governments and communities to manage their marine resources. An MPA can have varying degrees of regulations, including no-take and no-entry where no fishing is allowed and entrance into the park is not permitted, to varying permitted use that regulate the fishing and use practices. Some of the countries we visited, such as Australia (Northern Great Barrier Reef), Palau, and New Caledonia have large human populations utilizing the reefs and have prioritized establishing large protected and managed areas to conserve their nearshore reef systems.

Shrinking shark numbers on the Great Barrier Reef unlikely to have cascading impacts

February 22, 2021

New evidence suggests that reef sharks exert weak control over coral reef food webs Shark populations are dwindling worldwide, and scientists are concerned that the decline could trigger a cascade of impacts that hurt coral reefs. But a new paper published …

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Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation

The Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation is dedicated to the conservation and restoration of living oceans and pledges to champion their preservation through research, education and a commitment to Science Without Borders.®


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