Kids & Family

Mote Marine Lab Announces SCUBAnauts International Chapter

The program will aim to guide young women and men between the ages of 12 and 18 with personal development through scuba diving.

From Mote Marine Lab: Mote Marine Laboratory is excited to announce it will host the first-ever Sarasota area chapter of SCUBAnauts International, which guides young men and women, ages 12 through 18, along an exciting pathway for personal development by involving them in the marine sciences through underwater marine research activities such as special environmental and undersea conservation projects that build character, promote active citizenship and develop effective leadership skills. The new chapter will join three existing chapters (St. Petersburg, Tarpon Springs and Tampa) and will be lead by the teen members and their parents. Mote’s Coral Health & Disease Research Program Manager Dr. Erinn Muller will serve as the chapter’s Science Advisor and Mote Aquarium Biologist Heather Hooper will serve as the chapter’s Dive Master and Safety Officer. Interested teens in the greater Sarasota-Bradenton area and at least one of their parents are invited to attend an orientation meeting at Mote starting at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 1, 2017. The meeting will be located in Mote’s Buchanan conference room located on the third floor (1600 Ken Thompson Parkway, Sarasota, FL).

  • If you’re interested in joining the Sarasota chapter, but can’t make the meeting, please fill out this Google Form. Within the form, please indicate whether you're attending the March 1 meeting.

“Mote is pleased to host the first-ever Sarasota chapter of SCUBAnauts International,” said Dr. Michael P. Crosby, Mote President & CEO. “This organization’s goals coincide with Mote’s mission of using scientific research and education to address the profound challenges marine ecosystems face worldwide. I have worked with SNI for several years and looking forward to connecting our local teens in this new chapter. SNI members represent some of the best in the next generation of leaders in our community and in science-based ocean conservation.”

One Mote-led SCUBAnauts International project is a partnership between Mote scientists, members of SCUBAnauts International, Combat Wounded Veteran Challenge and Gold Star Teen Adventures to help plant threatened staghorn corals in a special reef restoration site in the Florida Keys.“Everyone who plants coral is a Mote volunteer citizen scientist that is not only helping us restore the coral reefs but helping us gather data and conduct the science that is essential to restore coral reefs,” Crosby said. “We are excited to extend the mission of SCUBAnauts International to the Sarasota area.

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We are also grateful to our friends at Mote for providing much needed expertise in helping launch this new chapter,” said Paul Foisy, President of SCUBAnauts International. Paul’s daughter, Mia, who is involved in the organization, said,”I’ve been with this organization since I was 11-and-a-half years old. I started that young because my brother was involved. I would go to the meetings and sit in the back and once they got to the science presentations I thought it was just so cool, but I never really thought about what was under the water. After joining, I’ve learned so much more about how important our marine environment is and I love to be able to teach other kids how much the ocean affects our everyday life.”

Image Courtesy Of Mote Marine Lab

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