About the project

Coral Hero Komodo is a community-led reef restoration initiative in Komodo National Park, Indonesia. We restore damaged reefs through coral transplantation and ongoing monitoring—working hand in hand with local communities and divers to protect marine life. Our mission is to rebuild healthy reefs, support coastal livelihoods, and inspire more people to care for the ocean

Why reefs matter

Coral reefs occupy less than 1% of the ocean floor yet support about 25% of marine life. They buffer storms, sustain fisheries, and anchor local economies through nature-based tourism.

Heat stress and pollution are pushing many systems past thresholds. Restoration buys time: it stabilizes structure, preserves genetics, and keeps ecosystems functional while climate action scales.

Close-up of healthy coral polyps
Close-up of resilient coral polyps.

How it works

Coral restoration process
Suspended nursery growing climate-tolerant fragments.

Science-Based

Our work is guided by ecological understanding and continuous monitoring. We assess reef health, identify threats, and apply proven restoration methods to support long-term reef recovery

Community-Driven

Local partners guide site selection and care for nurseries, ensuring benefits stay rooted where reefs grow.

Education-Focused

We prioritize heat-tolerant genotypes and shaded microhabitats to improve survival through marine heatwaves.

Sustainable Impact

We prioritize heat-tolerant genotypes and shaded microhabitats to improve survival through marine heatwaves.

From nurseries to thriving reefs

Restoration is more than planting. We stabilize rubble, design microhabitats, and stagger outplants through seasons to improve survival. Each site receives a bespoke plan based on currents, light, and heat history.

Shallow reef crest with waves
Designing with energy and light in mind.
"Every fragment we plant is a promise to the future reef. The work is patient, the results beautiful."

— Field lead, Coral Resurrection