This is a snorkel event only for the Great Annual Fish Count. It is a shore entrance with a maximum depth of 12 feet.

This is both a snorkel and scuba survey, but participants will need their own boat to get to the survey sites. Average depths will range from 5 to 35 feet.

Nine REEF members joined REEF Director of Science, Dr. Christy Pattengill-Semmens, for a Field Survey week in Nevis last week, kicking off the 2012 REEF Trip season with a bang. The group stayed at Oualie Beach Resort on Nevis and dove with the on-site dive operator, Scuba Safaris. Over 120 surveys were conducted, which is a great addition to the REEF database for this region (prior to this trip, there were only 7 surveys from Nevis). Each afternoon, the group would gather for a few hours to discuss the day's sightings, review images and video, and enter survey data.

Speed Dating Fishy Style: How Fish Spawn and When You're Likely to Catch Them in the Act

http://www.reef.org/resources/webinars

Every month, scientists, government agencies, and other groups request raw data from REEF’s Fish Survey Project database. Here is a sampling of who has asked for REEF data recently and what they are using it for:

-A researcher from Florida International University is using REEF data from the Florida Keys to study changes in trophic interactions as a result of changes in top level predator communities in no-take reserves.

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