An Eagle Scout project to build some artificial reef in Mobile Bay has made some partners and taken off, reports AL.com's Mary Helene Hall.
St. Paul's Episcopal School senior John Shell had a plan to place 50 reefs, which measure a little more than 2 cubic feet and, like the real thing, provide habitat for fish, crabs and oysters and improve water quality.
Well, by July he had placed 175 of the reefs and raised more than $52,000. The city of Fairhope plans to place 14 Eagle Reefs at city-owned locations. The Partners of Environmental Progress has a goal of installing 1,000 of the reefs nationwide.
And the University of South Alabama plans to get involved with the project.
Of course, this isn't the first reef restoration project along Alabama's Gulf Coast. The natural reefs have taken a beating from erosion and sedimentation, drought, predation, and harvesting, according to the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation.