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Nova Scotia

Mi'kmaw conservation group builds artificial reefs to give sea life a new home

This weekend, dozens of hollow concrete blocks that resemble a coral reefwill be placed at the bottom of the Northumberland Straitoff Nova Scotia to create habitat for struggling sea life.

50 reef balls will be deployed in Merigomish Harbour in Pictou County

Project coordinator Christian Francis says it's taken a lot of hard work each reef ball weighs between 70 and 90 kilograms. (Phlis McGregor/CBC)

This weekend, dozens of hollow concrete blocks that resemble a coral reefwill be placed at the bottom of the Northumberland Straitoff Nova Scotia to create ahabitat for struggling sea life.

Divers are setting up50 reef balls at the bottom ofMerigomish Harbourwhere invasive species and fishing activities have disrupted the ecosystem that lobster, shellfish and seaweed depend upon.

The plan is to deploy another 150 reef balls inMoodie Cove, just off ofPictou Landing First Nation, this spring.

The locations werechosen because they'reculturally significantto the community, saidChristian Francis,project coordinator for the Coastal Restoration Fund.

"We place them on the seabed and they just provide a safe area for these animals to sort of come in and grow and rest and live," he said.

The project lead travelled to the U.S. to learn from a group that makes reef balls similar to the ones shown here. (David Laughlin/CBC)

Members of theMi'kmaw Conservation Group, a program run by The Confederacy of Mainland Mi'kmaq, spent the summer building the large concrete reef balls, which weigh between 70 and 90 kilograms.

It's not easy work and getting the structures to the bottom of the sea is the next challenge. This weekend, Francis and others will load the reef balls onto a boat and travel an hour and 45 minutes to the location they've scouted.

"We've been using a high-tech system of rebar, wheelbarrows and muscle, but for the deployment we have going on this weekend we've hired out a crane, which will help immensely," he said.

The reef balls are made from a special, environmentally friendly material that won't change the pH levels of the water, he said.

The group will use a crane to help lift the heavy blocks onto a boat. (David Laughlin/CBC)

Francis said similar initiatives have taken place in the Halifax harbour, but he believes this projectwill beone of the largest of its kind in the province.

Artificial reefs provide shelter and protection for aquatic species and also support the growth of algae, an important part of the marine ecosystem, according to the non-profit group Clean Foundation.

To make sure the artificial reefs are doing what they're supposed to, a dive team willcheck on them over the next few years.

"We'll be recording species that have come in and colonized [the reef balls] and what sort of changes are going on down there," Francis said.

Moodie Cove and Merigomish Harbour were identified as culturally significant sites where community members wanted to see improvements. (David Laughlin/CBC)

The unique projecthas been met withenthusiasm from members of the community, manyof whom have been hired over the last several months to be part of it,said Francis.

"It's been really great for me to be able to do good work like this in my own home community," he said.

In the future, Francis hopes to use artificial reefs to offsetdamage done by development projects. Companies would pay to create the habitatif their projects encroachonsensitive ecosystems, he said.

But first comes the hard work of actually getting the heavy structures to the bottom of the sea.

"We're expecting to get a little sore this weekend," Francissaid.

With files from Phlis McGregor and CBC's Information Morning