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Just below large cruise ships near the port of Miami, an underwater camera captures video from another world. That camera is showing marine life in an unusual way.
The camera is in Miami’s Government Cut waterway for shipping, and it belongs to Coral Morphologic. It is a business led by a scientist and a musician. They mix science, art and business to bring undersea life into popular culture.
Their company produces beautiful images that show underwater creatures on social media. It also makes videos of coral set to music. And it sells clothing for the beach with ocean designs.
Colin Foord and his business partner J.D. McKay recently discussed their business with the Associated Press.
“We aren’t all art. We aren’t all science. We aren’t all tech. We are an alchemy,” Foord said.
Alchemy is a term that means a process that changes or transforms something into something else even more valuable.
One of their most popular projects is the Coral City Camera. It recently passed 2 million views and usually has about 100 viewers online at any given time each day.
Foord said, “We’re going to actually be able to document one year of coral growth.” He said that has never been done in a live environment on a coral reef. Foord added that is “only possible because we have this technological connection right here at the port of Miami that allows us to have power and internet.”
The livestream has already revealed that staghorn and other corals can do well in an undersea environment close to a large city.
Foord and McKay’s video has shown fluorescence in some of the coral. That is an unexpected behavior for such corals, Foord said.
Foord added that the video has shown 177 species of fish, and other sea life including dolphins and manatees.
McKay, meanwhile, described how he mixes video and music in another project. He uses an aquarium – a very large container for sea creatures.
McKay explained, “We essentially create a set with one of these aquariums, and then obviously there’s actors — coral or shrimp or whatever — and then we film it…I soundtrack it with some ambient-like sounds, something very oceanic.”
Ambient music is quiet and relaxing with sounds that repeat many times.
Foord described the importance of their work to the environment.
“The port is a priceless place for coral research,” he said.
Beyond the science, there are the clothes. Coral Morphologic sells swimwear that takes designs from flower anemones and brain coral. The company says it uses materials that are good for the environment such as a kind of nylon taken from old fishing nets.
“We see the power of tech connecting people with nature. We are lucky as artists, and corals are benefitting,” Foord said.
Words in This Story
cruise ship –n. a very large ship used for pleasure or vacation trips
marine –adj. related to the sea or the ocean
coral – n. a hard material formed on the bottom of the sea by the skeletons of small creatures
reef – n. a long line of rocks or coral or a high area of sand near the surface of the water in the ocean
fluorescence – n. the act of producing a very bright light
species – n. biology : a group of animals or plants that are similar and can produce young animals or plants
anemone – n. a small, brightly colored sea animal that looks like a flower and sticks to rocks or coral
benefit –v. to receive a good result from an action or situation
*This article has been edited and reprinted from VOA Learning English with permission from Voice of America (VOA) for use in English language materials.