If you care about saving coral reefs, there are lots of ways you can help.

  1. Make a Donation
  2. Become a Friend of the Reef
  3. Be a Smart Consumer
  4. Show Your Support for CORAL
  5. Become an Advocate
  6. Live Sustainably
  7. Join Our Online Communities
  8. Enter the CORAL Photo Contest
  9. Raise Money for CORAL
  10. Educate Others
  11. Do Even More...

Join Us! Make a Donation

We unite communities to protect coral reefs in nine project sites around the world. We want to expand our work, and we need your help. Donate Now »

Become a Friend of the Reef

Make a regular monthly or quarterly donation to CORAL and receive special benefits as a Friend of the Reef:

  1. One-year subscription to our quarterly print newsletter, CORAL Current
  2. Subscription to our electronic newsletter, E-Current
  3. Our annual wall calendar featuring stunning underwater photography
  4. Recognition in the annual report
  5. And more...

Become a Friend of the Reef »

Be a Smart Consumer

Support the health of the oceans when you shop by understanding how your purchases can impact the environment.

Don't buy coral jewelry - harvesting of red coral for jewelry is deadly. CORAL's partner and supporter, Tiffany & Co., says it’s "too precious to wear."

Choose seafood wisely - if you don't know which fish are sustainably harvested and safe to eat, we have guides that can help you make the right choices.

Support coral-friendly businesses - know what to look for when planning your next dive trip or vacation.

Buy a copy of Reef - CORAL receives a portion of the proceeds from every copy sold of this beautiful coffee table book and DVD produced by Scubazoo and published by DK.

Give the gift of coral reefs - CORAL memberships make great gifts for friends and family members who care about our planet.

Shop smart - buy from your favorite stores and save coral reefs at the same time: premier online dive shop Leisure Pro has partnered with CORAL to raise awareness about the importance of saving coral reefs now. And when you shop at your favorite online retailers using iGive, CORAL gets a donation.

Show Your Support for CORAL

To help CORAL raise awareness about the importance of saving coral reefs and the work we do:

Add a badge to your Web site, blog, or e-mail signature.

Send a beautiful coral reef E-Card to three of your friends and ask each of them to pass it on.

Order coral reef–themed checks, mailing labels, or cotton checkbook covers from Message! Checks. CORAL gets a percentage of each order.

Become an Advocate

Call, email, and send letters to your elected officials to let them know that you passionately support ocean conservation.

WAYS TO GET INVOLVED

1. The Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009 (H.R. 146) passed the Senate in March and now goes before President Obama for signing. If signed, the act will be the largest conservation measure to be approved in more than 15 years. The act includes much-needed funding for ocean exploration, ocean acidification research and monitoring, coastal and estuarine land conservation, and much more.
UPDATE
: The Onmibus Public Land Management Act of 2009 (H.R. 146) became law on March 30, 2009.

2. Reauthorization of the Coral Reef Conservation Act of 2000 (H.R. 860) would expand federal coral reef conservation efforts and give the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration more authority to respond to emergency situations when corals are harmed. It would codify a coral reef task force first created in 2000. The bill, H.R. 860, is similar to a previous version of the coral reef act that passed the House in 2007 but stalled in the Senate.
Ask the House and Senate to pass H.R. 860 »

3. CORAL Executive Director Brian Huse represented twelve leading ocean conservation organizations in making recommendations for coral reef conservation to the Obama Administration and the 111th Congress. Huse presented the recommendations and solicited support from additional parties at the U.S. Coral Reef Task Force meeting held in Washington, D.C., during the last week of February.
Read CORAL's Recommendations for Coral Reef Conservation to the Obama Adminstration »

4. CORAL and thirty-one other conservation organizations recently urged the EPA to adopt stringent water-quality criteria that adequately protect marine life from ocean acidification.
Read the letter sent to the EPA »

Live Sustainably

Take small but powerful and environmentally conscious steps like switching to compact fluorescent light bulbs, planting native trees, buying energy-efficient cars, and teleconferencing instead of flying.

Follow the 3 R's—reduce, reuse, recycle—to ameliorate the negative impacts of pollution and landfills on the health of our oceans.

Check out the CORAL resources section for more ways to protect our environment.

Conserving energy to reduce your carbon footprint is one way to fight the effects of global warming and lessen large-scale threats to reef ecosystems. Discover your current carbon footprint and measure your conservation success using a carbon footprint calculator.

Join Our Online Communities

Become a fan on Facebook.

Join the Coral Reef Revolution and become a member of our Facebook cause.

Subscribe to our channel on YouTube.

Enter the CORAL Photo Contest

To help raise awareness about the threats to our planet's coral reefs, enter your underwater photos in the CORAL E-Current Photo Contest for a chance to win a copy of Reef by Scubazoo. Winning photographs will be featured in the bimonthly issue of E-Current Photo, our free electronic newsletter. By focusing on the beauty of coral reefs, we can remind people of what's at stake. Enter today!

Become a CORAL Fundraiser

Launch your own fundraising campaign with help from Change.org or Chip in. Be sure to let us know about your progress so we can share your story with other coral reef supporters to inspire more people to get involved.

Educate Others

Whether you are a teacher, a student, or simply a concerned and responsible citizen, you have the ability to share your passion and knowledge with others. Because much of the visible damage to coral reef ecosystems happens deep in the ocean, many people don’t realize that our reefs are in trouble, nor do they understand that this crisis will affect all of us, no matter where we live. Please help us get the word out; we have lots of educational materials to help you.

Give a presentation - at your school, a club, or a house party that you host.

Contact the media - write a letter to the editor or pitch a coral-related article in your local newspaper.

Sign up for CORAL’s e-mail list - we'll let you know about opportunities for you to help your elected officials understand the importance of coral reef conservation.

Do Even More...

Become a CORAL volunteer - we’re always looking for smart and passionate people to help us save coral reefs.

Research corporate matching - ask your company to match your personal donation or underwrite CORAL’s publications, Web site, or videos.

Remember CORAL at tax time - designate CORAL for a Combined Federal Campaign Contribution (#10418).

Add CORAL to your will - and make the gift of living reefs part of your legacy.

Do even more - contribute appreciated securities, real estate, art, or other items of value.

We need your help! Anything you can do to give, teach, or inspire on behalf of coral reefs is deeply appreciated, not only by CORAL, but also by the millions of creatures, human and otherwise, that depend on coral reefs. Thank you.