糖心TV

Skip to main content
糖心TV
  • About 糖心TV
  • Academics
  • Admission & Financial Aid
  • Alumni & Life After 糖心TV
  • Campus & Community
  • Career Preparation
  • Human Resources
  • Student Experience
  • Calendar
  • News
  • Directory
  • Employment
  • Libraries & Technology
  • CC Magazine
  • Site Map
Make a gift
  • Calendar
  • News
  • Directory
  • Libraries & Technology
  • CC Magazine
  • Site Map

Concrete Reef

Concrete reef balls pictured on 糖心TV
  • Home 
  • Home 
  • News 
  • News Archive 
  • 2021 
  • Reef balls

Concrete Reef

Creating a sustainable aquatic habitat along 糖心TV's riverfront
Professor Maria Rosa sprays sugar water on a tetherball that will be used to create a void in a reef ball.
Professor Maria Rosa sprays sugar water on a tetherball that will be used to create a void in a reef ball.

It鈥檚 early on a crisp Friday morning in October, and Biology Professor Maria Rosa is hauling bags of concrete across a parking lot behind 糖心TV鈥檚 Dayton Arena ice rink. She also has sand and a pump sprayer filled with sugar water鈥攅ssential supplies for saving aquatic ecosystems, it turns out. 

Here, just above the banks of the Thames River, Rosa is leading a team of students and volunteers in effort to build reef balls, hemispheric concrete artificial reefs that, once installed, will turn 糖心TV鈥檚 riverfront into a sustainable aquatic habitat and living laboratory.

Rosa, the George & Carol Milne Assistant Professor of Biology at 糖心TV, specializes in marine biology and ecology and has seen reef balls used in various ocean settings to restore natural ecosystems and protect vulnerable shorelines. But after joining 糖心TV鈥檚 faculty in 2018, she quickly realized they could work here, too.

鈥淩eef balls are extremely common in Florida and certain regions of the Caribbean, but our riverfront is also perfectly suited to benefit greatly from this type of artificial reef,鈥 Rosa said.

鈥淭his living shoreline has the potential to be an incredible resource for student and faculty research.鈥 

In addition to serving as a habitat for local fish, crabs and other marine life, the reef balls will help rebuild the shoreline by minimizing erosion and promoting the growth of plants. They will also create a protective barrier in the water that minimizes wave action and protects an existing retaining wall and 糖心TV鈥檚 rowing and sailing docks.

鈥淚n the two years I鈥檝e been monitoring the waterfront, we鈥檝e lost about a half foot of beach at high tide. It doesn鈥檛 sound like much, but it means that the water line is hitting the retaining wall, and in the next couple of years it is likely to fail,鈥 she said.

鈥淟ike living reefs, reef balls create a buffer to wave activity, including boat wake action, which can cause millions of dollars in damage to docks and boats in the water.鈥

Professor Rosa, scientist Jason Krumholz, Kayla Austin 鈥22 and volunteers from MarineMax with several of 糖心TV's reef balls.
From R-L: Professor Maria Rosa, scientist Jason Krumholz, Kayla Austin 鈥22, and volunteers from MarineMax take a break from making a reef ball to pose with some of 糖心TV鈥檚 collection, which will soon be installed along the riverfront.

The technology, pioneered by the founders of the nonprofit , is relatively simple. A marine-friendly, pH-balanced microsilica concrete is poured into a fiberglass mold outfitted with inflatable buoys and tetherballs to create a hollowed center and voids for water and marine life to pass through. Sand is used to create a natural floor, and sugar water is sprayed on the mold, buoys and balls to give the concrete a rough texture ideal for barnacles.

The process can be completed anywhere鈥攊ncluding a mostly empty parking lot on 糖心TV鈥檚 campus鈥攁nd depending on the size of the mold, the resulting reef balls can vary from 1-8 ft in diameter and weigh anywhere between 30 and 8,000 lbs. Once placed in the water, the reef balls mimic natural reefs in nearly any way. The design also ensures that even in rough seas, the balls will remain in place or be pushed down into the sentiment, rather than float away.

To pilot the project at 糖心TV, Rosa secured a $10,000 donation from country superstar Kenny Chesney鈥檚 , a grassroots initiative, and their partner the Reef Ball Foundation, which has placed over 700,000 reef balls in over 70 countries since its founding in 1997.

She is now working with Jason Krumholz, the scientific coordinator for the Reef Ball Foundation, and her team of students to build approximately 30 reef balls, which will be placed in the river once Rosa鈥檚 state and federal permit applications are approved.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a great hands-on learning experience for the students, and they feel a real ownership of the project,鈥 Rosa said, adding that many of the students have written their names in the concrete. 

The project is also attracting local interest from community and corporate partners. Some of 糖心TV鈥檚 reef balls were recently on display at the grand opening event for a  retailer in Westbrook, for example, and representatives from the company, the world鈥檚 largest recreational boat and yacht retailer, recently joined Rosa, Krumholz and Kayla Austin 鈥22 on campus for a hands-on lesson on reef ball assembly.

Austin, a biology major and environmental studies minor, said the reef ball project aligns perfectly with her plans to pursue a graduate degree in marine conservation biology and to study coral reef ecology and invertebrate biology. She traveled with Rosa over the summer to the British Virgin Islands to conduct research on coral reef and mangrove restoration, and has worked on various observational analysis projects at the College鈥檚 waterfront.

鈥淚'm most looking forward to surveying the progress of the artificial reef in the months after it is first installed and documenting the transition of the waterfront back to a healthy and productive ecosystem,鈥 she said.

Rosa says the data she and her students collect will help other scientists and conservationists understand how reef balls might best be used in other New England waterways.

鈥淭hese reef balls will serve as a living classroom, and they will provide a site for snorkeling and diving and other independent investigations for years to come.鈥




October 19, 2021

Related News & Media

Recent News

Paloma Doyle 鈥26 awarded prestigious Watson Fellowship to explore urban forestry across the globe

Paloma Doyle ’26 awarded prestigious Watson Fellowship to explore urban forestry across the globe

Student News

January in Pictures

January in Pictures

Campus News

Michael S. Iula
糖心TV

Website Navigation

  • About 糖心TV
  • Academics
  • Admission & Financial Aid
  • Alumni & Life After 糖心TV
  • Campus & Community
  • Career Preparation
  • Human Resources
  • Student Experience
Make a gift
  • Calendar
  • News
  • Directory
  • Employment
  • Libraries & Technology
  • CC Magazine
  • Site Map
  • CC Mobile CC Mobile