Southern Cross Club Teams Up with REEF on Important Local Project

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During the winter full moon, in late January and early February, the normally solitary and territorial Nassau grouper will travel a long way to gather at a protected spawning site just off the west end of Little Cayman − one of the last healthy and active Nassau grouper aggregation sites in the Caribbean. Watching the activity carefully (as they have been doing for more than a decade) will be marine scientists and researchers of the Grouper Moon Project, a collaboration of the Cayman Islands Department of Environment (DOE) and the Reef Environmental Education Foundation (REEF), a volunteer organization. Supporting the project is the Southern Cross Club, its staff and its owner Peter Hillenbrand, who also opens up his home to the researchers. For two weeks during the study Hillenbrand’s house is transformed into the project’s base of operations. An avid diver and conservationist, Hillenbrand is happy to share his personal space if it means saving his favorite fish. 
“Nassau grouper are beautiful, they have personalities and they can be like friendly puppy dogs,” he says. “Unfortunately these puppy dogs are easy to catch and taste very good.”  Peter Hillenbrand pretty much sums up what has happened to the iconic Nassau grouper in the Caribbean. Overfishing has depleted traditional spawning sites to the point where most are dormant or extinct, which is why the Little Cayman site is so vital in conservation efforts to save the species. 
The Grouper Moon Project had its beginnings in 2002 after an estimated 2000 fish were taken from the unprotected Little Cayman site. To reduce fishing pressure and allow the Department of Environment to monitor the site, Cayman’s Marine Conservation Board implemented an alternate-year fishing strategy. In 2003 based on Nassau grouper population numbers, the decision was made to impose an 8-year ban on fishing the aggregations. The ban was extended in late 2011 and is set to expire in 2019. With a mission to understand the fish aggregation and take the necessary steps to protect the species, team members collect information and build a case on behalf of the Nassau grouper.  
“We want to get the science to help them,” says project manager Christy Semmens.  “The whole idea behind the Grouper Moon Project is to better understand the Nassau grouper aggregation and best inform the Cayman Islands government so they could make good decisions. They put together the best way forward for Nassau Grouper management.”
Through the years the project has grown in scope and support, and it has been expanded to also look at the remaining historical aggregation sites in Cayman Brac and Grand Cayman. Current components include: acoustic fish tagging, genetic studies, satellite tracking of drifting baby grouper, juvenile habitat research and educational outreach.
“The data collected through the Grouper Moon Project has enabled the Department of the Environment to build a convincing argument for protection,” says Tim Austin, Deputy Director of Research and Assessment for the Cayman Islands Department of Environment. “We measure success by the increase in the number of groupers that show up at the site each year and by the increasing abundance on our routine fish monitoring research dives around the island for the rest of the year.”
So far the protective measures introduced a decade ago are having a meaningful and positive impact − good news for the endangered Nassau grouper and all who care about it.  This includes marine wildlife artist and conservationist Guy Harvey, who has helped spread the positive message through a documentary.
“The importance of the documentary Mystery of the Grouper Moon is in letting the rest of the world know that the Cayman Islands is taking a responsible role in conserving an iconic reef species,” he says. “It is important to let people know that the conservation efforts are working and long term management of these valuable species is important to environmental sustainability and to the socio economic wellbeing of Caribbean countries.”
Educating the next generation of Caymanians about the conservation work being done is important to the people behind the Grouper Moon Project. In advance of the aggregation, December workshops were held on Grand Cayman and Cayman Brac to distribute a marine science curriculum with lesson plans and free materials for teachers who want to introduce the Nassau grouper issue in their classrooms.  Students learn about the grouper’s historical role in Cayman, the serious decline in its population and the conservation challenges the species now faces. From their classrooms, schoolchildren will witness the aggregation and scientific fieldwork being conducted at the site via live video feeds to be streamed on online at www.reef.org January 21 and 22.
“As they explore the aggregation with me, the immediacy and reality of the experience really touches them,” says scientist and host Brice Semmens. “Put simply, we are giving students their first diving experience -- and it happens to be with thousands of huge, endangered reef fish.”
Christy Semmens says they want local schoolchildren to feel proud of the work being done in the Cayman Islands. “The Nassau grouper is such an icon for the Caribbean and it’s really a source of pride to have one of the healthiest grouper populations in the Caribbean, ” she says.
Scientists and volunteers begin arriving on Little Cayman January 15 and they will be there for two weeks setting up camp at Peter Hillenbrand’s house to continue the work that has been going on for more than a decade. Researchers will be making several dives a day documenting the aggregation. They will come and go from the Southern Cross Club boat dock and have use of resort facilities for public presentations and other needs. Christy Semmens says the data collected during the study will go into a big database for DOE to review and consider as they make management decisions.
“The research has revealed other characteristics of Nassau grouper that further lend disturbing evidence to why aggregation fishing is so detrimental,” says Tim Austin. “Older, larger and more experienced fish are important in locating the spawning sites and leading new recruits to the area. Older fish tend to spend more time at an aggregation and are therefore more susceptible to being caught.”
Austin says science has also helped them conclude there is a strong possibility that fish that spawn in Cayman recruit back to Cayman because of offshore oceanographic conditions. Observations also help the department better understand how, when and why fish show up at certain locations, which helps protect the right areas at the right time of year.
“We have learnt that grouper aggregations can move and so the original sites that we had scheduled for protection needed to be expanded to take into account the more subtle shifts in the peak density of the aggregation,” he says.
REEF is a volunteer organization and DOE has a limited research budget, so the work carried out by the Grouper Moon Project depends on volunteers, donations, fundraising and grants. Supporting the study are the NOAA International Coral Reef Conservation Program, Oregon State University, the Disney Worldwide Conservation Fund, among others. Christy Semmens and Tim Austin both say support from the community is vital. On Little Cayman they rely on help from the Southern Cross Club, the Little Cayman Beach Resort, Brac Reef Divers and Peter Hillenbrand. On Grand Cayman, Divetech is helping DOE staff with technical training and equipment for research work on deep aggregations.
“Peter has been an amazing supporter and friend to the project from day one,” says Semmens. “He opens up his home and we turn it into a little base of operations with equipment on the porch - with kids and people everywhere, it is science mayhem!”
Hillenbrand relishes the exchanges that take place on his porch during the grouper study and he’s happy to share his home for the cause.
“It’s thrilling to participate and listen to the scientists and researchers discuss the days events,” he says. “They are good people and this is a good cause. My involvement has introduced me to some new friends, and it is helping the people of the Cayman Islands and the Caribbean Sea by bringing real answers to a real problem.  This research is vitally important to our understanding of the future of Nassau grouper.  We should all learn from this seminal work.”
“The Department of Environment and REEF could not carry out the scope of meaningful and vital research work required to protect Nassau grouper without the considerable on-island support provided each year by Southern Cross Club staff and Peter Hillenbrand,” says Tim Austin.
Project leaders say ultimately protection of the Nassau grouper relies on everyone who cares about the species doing their part to save it, and then carrying the message and passion to inspire changes that are needed.
 “The grouper moon project is such a rewarding project to be involved in – to get in and do great and interesting science,” says Christy Semmens. “We know education works and we are reaching out hoping to make a difference for this cool species.”
About the Southern Cross Club
The casually sophisticated Southern Cross Club Fish & Dive Resort is Little Cayman's original resort. It features 14 beachfront bungalows complete with a top-rated, professional in-house diving and fishing operation. A unique blend of rusticity and elegance the resort is often described as “Barefoot Luxury”.  Guests can expect friendly and diligent service, delicious food, inviting rooms with breath-taking views and a comfortable dive boat ― a few of the things that bring them back year after year.  Little Cayman is renowned for its breath-taking and pristine coral reefs and spectacular dive adventures. The resort’s beach-based location also provides flats fisherman with access to Bonefish and Permit just minutes away. 
 
For reservations or more information:Telephone: 1 (800) 899-CLUB (2582)E-mail info@southerncrossclub.comWebsite: www.southerncrossclub.comFacebook:  www.facebook/SouthernCrossClub
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