Coral Reefs Are Recovering Faster Than Scientists Expected
Coral Reef Recovery is happening faster than many scientists once believed possible, but only under the right conditions. Long-term monitoring from the Caribbean and Indo Pacific shows that reefs can regain coral cover and rebuild three-dimensional structure when fishing pressure is reduced, water quality improves, and protections are enforced. The idea that reefs are doomed after bleaching events is being challenged by real data collected over decades.
Reef Resilience Science reveals that recovery is not random. Areas with healthy herbivore populations, strong marine protected area enforcement, and fewer back to back heat stress events show measurable rebounds in coral recruitment and structural complexity. Studies published in Science and Nature Climate Change highlight that while climate change raises the baseline risk, local management decisions strongly influence whether reefs collapse or rebuild.
Ocean Conservation Strategy becomes clearer when recovery case studies are compared to areas still declining. Flattening reefs are not inevitable; they are often the result of cumulative stress. When that stress is reduced, ecosystems respond. The evidence points to a simple but powerful conclusion: give reefs breathing room, and many of them fight their way back.
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Coral reefs are more resilient than we give them credit for.
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On this episode of the How to Protect the Ocean podcast, we are going to be talking about
how scientists have learned that coral reefs can actually recover faster than we
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originally thought.
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If you're interested in weekday news,
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This is the How to Protect the Ocean podcast, your weekday ocean news update.
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If you are interested in staying informed on the ocean each and every weekday, hit that
follow button right now so you don't miss tomorrow's story.
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So here's what the research shows.
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There are a number of different sources that we have today and it is phenomenal.
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We have a 20 year history, long running data from Jamaica, Cayman Islands, Bermuda and
other Caribbean reef locations.
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We also have a story on nature climate change and how the Great Barrier Reef, uh reefs in
the coral triangle and other Indo-Pacific reef system have recovered even with climate
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change and how that will change over that time.
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And then we have a study, a couple of studies with NOAA Coral Reef Watch.
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uh You know, the recovery of that and looking at science information from the US Pacific
reefs like Hawaii and other Pacific islands, US Caribbean reefs and reefs in your
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jurisdictions uh in Florida and Puerto Rico.
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So lots of data on looking at it.
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But what it really shows is that we have long term data monitoring uh everything that lets
you actually measure the recovery over decades.
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The Indo-Pacific reef shows broader patterns that link local management and heat stress
recovery to
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recovery success and NOAA's work ties it all together with global heat stress tracking and
management framework that applies to many reefs sites.
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So look, let's just get into it.
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When a coral reef in these days, in this day and age in 2026, when it hits a problem,
coral reefs have a very narrow range of parameters.
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So pH has to be around 8.3, 8.4, the...
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The temperature has to be within a certain range anywhere from like I believe it was like
25 degrees or 22 degrees to you know maximum of maybe like 27 28 degrees anything above
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that it could go through heat stress.
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Maybe my range are a little off there.
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There has to be good fish communities like herbivorous fish.
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There have to be like enough like coral eating fish.
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There have to be enough cleaners within that state like within the reef like invertebrates
that clean the fish from parasites and everything that will help support coral recovery.
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Okay, we also notice that reduced fishing pressure increases recovery rates.
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Surprise, surprise.
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And that lower pollution improves resilience.
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Again, surprise, surprise.
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Stable temperature conditions will actually enhance survival.
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Are all these surprises?
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No, but unfortunately in a lot of these places, this isn't what's going on.
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You know, we aren't lowering the pollution.
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We're actually increasing the pollution.
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We aren't lowering, we're not making the temperature stable.
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We're actually increasing the temperature.
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and it's fluctuating varying degrees depending on where you live on the planet.
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We're not all often time reducing fishery pressure, we're actually increasing fishing
pressure.
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So these are all different cases that we have to realize will help in the recovery of
coral reefs.
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So the NOAA studies noticed that monitoring enables rapid response to bleaching events.
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So the more that we're watching,
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the better that it is, right?
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The better that we can actually act, the faster we can act.
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Adaptive management improves long-term outcomes.
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This is a complex term, although I know what a lot of people think.
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Adaptive management, you adapt to the management strategies that you put forth, which is
exactly what it is.
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But unfortunately, when we put management plans together, a lot of times it's just
followed directly as we go through.
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What adaptive management does for coral reefs or for any kind of marine monitoring program
or management program is that when you start looking at
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your initial, you know, say it's a marine protected area or initial coral reef that you're
monitoring, you look at that coral reef and you assess it every maybe three years, every
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five years, every 10 years, or you go every two years, right?
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And then that's, and then you can absolutely tell when things are going awry or when
things are actually doing well or how that long-term data shows the natural variation or
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the response to human-influenced pressures like climate change, fishing,
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and pollution.
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And so when you have these long-term data and you start to see something happening, just
like I said, just like the study said before, when you're monitoring often, can like go
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into recovery mode and action mode a lot faster.
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And so when you start doing that, for instance, you know, on the Great Barrier Reef, every
once in a while, you get these starfish that come in.
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and they're an invasive species and they eat all the coral.
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And when I say starfish, it's not just one or two, you get millions of starfish over the
Great Barrier Reef and parts of the Great Barrier Reef and that can seriously affect the
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health of that coral reef.
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Well, if you're monitoring it carefully and you're monitoring it often, you will find out
that there are ways to go in and just pluck them out.
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You can just go in by hand and pluck them out and have...
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people go in and have a rapid response team to go in and help those corals out and make
sure that doesn't spread over more.
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Because the more that these starfish eat, the more they're actually going to grow in
population size and they're going to cover more area as they come in.
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having that adaptive and being able to say, you know, one thing we have to do is, you
know, we have to adapt to the original management strategy of, hey, we didn't know that
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these species came in in these areas.
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Now we have to go back and we have to say, hey,
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Let's go and make sure that we incorporate this and we start to do early detection of
these starfish.
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How do we do that?
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Through technology drones, uh know, people who are ecotourism boats that are often there.
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This is something that we always want to know.
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So if you're finding this this information valuable and you haven't followed us yet, this
is your reminder.
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So new ocean updates drop every weekday morning at 5 a.m.
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Eastern.
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So don't lose out.
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Hit that follow button right now.
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So here's, when we talk about recovery, here's what helps.
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So when you have strong and forced MPAs, reduced nutrient runoff, sustainable fisheries
management, and community-led stewardship, and climate change mitigation efforts, we start
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to see recovery happen faster.
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When you have MPAs, MPAs are designed, they do not have a physical boundary, they have
this imaginary boundary around a specific area that's an important area to coral reefs.
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It might be a spot where coral reefs are very diverse.
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It might be a spot where they are receiving coral larvae from another spot and is coming
into this area by currents and it's settling in this coral reef.
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That might be an important, what we call it a coral recruitment area.
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And that's an important spot.
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It's called, really, when we look at it from an ecological perspective, like as a manager,
like that's a biological sink.
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So that means there's larva coming in and settling in this area and it's very important.
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So if you allow fishing in this area,
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where you can get hooks that get caught on corals or you get fish that are taken away
often.
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Those corals are left vulnerable, but it's a sink and they're continuing to get the stuff,
but the corals can't build and build and nothing's just going to be settled.
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Eventually nothing's going to be settled there because the corals are going to disappear.
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This would be a prime spot for a marine protected area.
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And so when you have this marine protected area, you can't have fishing.
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There's certain things that you can't, anything extractive.
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So fishing, uh mining.
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you know fisheries where you're actually like grabbing like abalone or some kind of snail
or anything like that you can't have any extractive processes that happen within their
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activities that happen within that marine protected area what it does it allows natural
things to occur you can't stop marine pollution because pollution will come in you can't
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stop climate change from you know rearing its ugly head but you can stop extractive or any
any kind of human beings in that area that could harm the corals like scuba divers or
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snorkelers
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not that they do it on purpose, they can go in and they can hit the coral and then it can
like, you know, it could break off and you know, it damage the corals and things like that
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over time.
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That doesn't always happen.
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So, you know, you can have these little options that will help.
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So the marine protected area will help.
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I mentioned that marine protected areas can't help marine pollution from coming in, but
you can do that along the coastline.
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You can have better measurements for nutrient runoff.
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As I mentioned in yesterday's episode,
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nutrients in coral reefs don't do well.
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Nutrients allow for the propagation and the growth of algae.
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So when you have algae that grows on corals, the corals can't take them off unless there's
a fish that will eat algae or an invertebrate that will eat algae off the coral.
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But that doesn't always happen, especially if you're fishing within that.
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So having that reduced runoff from the coastline that we can easily manage and better
manage, that is a better thing to allow for that recovery to
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When we have sustainable fisheries management, mean, that's just it's really easy to
really think about what happens.
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You are fishing properly, you're not overfishing.
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And, you know, a lot of the times artisanal fishers are not necessarily overfishing, maybe
not on purpose.
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Maybe they need some some guidance.
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Maybe they need some collaboration with other people.
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There are a lot of organizations that go into communities like villages and so forth where
there's a lot of artisanal fishing and they work with the community to be like, how can we
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help in any kind of way?
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Sometimes, you know, communities will be fishing juvenile fish and not realize it's
juvenile fish because reef fish, when they're juveniles, they look very, very different
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than their adult uh form.
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They actually metamorphosize into a different color pattern and even different look.
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And so some fisheries don't realize that.
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Some artisanal fishers don't realize that over time.
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It's the only thing that's available because maybe they've over fished.
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another species, not that they're doing it on purpose by any means.
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But when you have scientists go in and work collaboratively with the communities, if
they're invited in, that makes sustainable fishing a lot easier in a lot of these uh
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ecologically diverse places like uh coral reefs.
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And of course, community led stewardship goes hand in hand with working with local
communities, making sure that the community is on board, making sure that they're leading
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the fact that they want to have sustainable fisheries.
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They want to have a reef that's diverse.
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They want to have protection from that reef that I talked about yesterday.
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When you have an intact reef, is structurally complex reef, you can actually get storm
protection like storm surge protection, which is really great.
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And of course, climate change.
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That's just something that we need to mitigate on a global level.
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And we need to help a lot of these small island communities, a lot of these uh global
south communities that may not have or may not be contributing to uh the greenhouse gas
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effect.
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just like other countries, developed countries are doing like Canada, US, and other places
around the world.
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climate mitigation needs to happen on a global level, much better than what we've seen
recently out of the US.
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Unfortunately, the US have basically said that CO2 is not a pollutant, and a lot of the
efforts uh and policies that are gonna happen are being taken away momentarily through
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executive order.
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Hopefully that will become better as we get a new administration in, or even hopefully the
midterms will change that.
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and we protect our environment better, we protect our people better.
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The whole point of this episode is that reefs can recover faster when protections are real
and stressors decline.
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When you leave a reef by itself and allow it to manage itself without having any fishing
pressures, any pollution, any climate change pressures, you will actually have an intact
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reef and a much better structurally complex reef.
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a much healthier reef and that will actually recover a lot faster than if you continue the
stressors like cumulonil stressors like pollution and fisheries and all that kind of
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stuff.
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This will actually help.
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So if you enjoyed that, follow the show now so you don't miss tomorrow's episode update.
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I am looking forward to talking about marine protected areas more.
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So hit that follow button and tune in tomorrow.
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And until then, I'm your host, Angelou, and have a great day.
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We'll talk to you next time and happy conservation.