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Lee
bounces into Reef Ball project with sinking off Sanibel
By KEVIN LOLLAR,
klollar@news-press.com
Published by
news-press.com
on June 12, 2004
Lee County’s latest artificial reef, which went down
Friday, is a whole new ballgame — Reef Ball, that is.

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2000 lb concrete Reef Balls were lowered into
plce friday morning, creating Lee County’s
newest artificial reef.
Chops Hancock/Special to news-press.com
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For only the second time, the Lee County Division of
Natural Resources has bought prefabricated modules to
make a reef, spending $16,440 on 84 concrete structures
called Reef Balls.
Most of the county’s reefs, on 19 sites in the Gulf
of Mexico and Charlotte Harbor, are made from donated
material, such as concrete culverts, bridge rubble and
boats.
But Reef Balls, distributed by Reef Innovations Inc.,
whose manufacturing plant is in Sarasota, have been
getting rave reviews from Florida and around the world.
One satisfied customer is Nova Southeastern
University’s Oceanographic Center, whose scientists
placed Reef Balls in an area of coral reef off Fort
Lauderdale that was damaged when a U.S. submarine ran
aground in 1993.
“We’re using Reef Balls, not as a restoration item
per se, but as a module to test scientific experiments,”
said Richard Dodge, dean of the Oceanographic Center.
“We’ve had great success with that as a module. We like
them. They’re doing well. Other people have used them in
other ways, and I think they’ve been successful as
well.”
With the attitude of “why buy the cow if the milk’s
free?” county marine biologist Chris Koepfer decided to
test the expensive Reef Balls against reefs made from
donated material.
“I’ve been satisfied with how the donated material
performs,” he said. “I really want to compare Reef
Balls, which cost a lot of money, to material that
doesn’t cost money to see if there is a corresponding
increase in productivity.
“These things better show me a factor of 10
improvement over the other stuff.”
Koepfer chose the ARC Barge reef site, 15 miles off
Sanibel in 60 feet of water, for the experiment because
several other artificial reefs are already there,
including a barge, concrete culverts, concrete pilings,
three 25-foot-tall steel radio towers and concrete
tetrahedrons (the first modules the county bought).
Having all these reefs close to the Reef Balls, which
look a little like Hostess Sno Balls with holes (for
fish to hide in), will make comparisons easy.
Using state and federal grants, which cost Lee County
taxpayers nothing, Koepfer bought 24 5-feet-tall, 2-ton
Reef Balls and 60 that are 3 feet tall and 1 ton.
His idea was to create four “patch reefs,” each with
six large modules surrounded by 16 small modules.
The deployment Friday was more difficult than
anticipated, certainly more difficult than most
artificial reefs.
With many reefs, including culverts, pilings and
bridge rubble, the material is barged to the site and
simply dumped into the water.
But Keopfer’s plan called for the Reef Balls to be
placed in precise relation to one another.
To do that, buoys were tied to the large Reef Balls
before they were lowered by a crane from a McCulley
Marine Inc. barge.
The buoys were to show the center of the ring, so the
small modules could be placed accordingly.
But the buoy lines kept getting twisted, slowing down
the process, and county engineering technologists Mike
Capps and Paul Stancati spent much of the day in the
water untangling the mess.

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Lee County marine biologist Chris Koepfer checks
the county’s new Reef Balls and artificial reef
placed on the Gulf floor Friday morning.
Chops Hancock/Special to news-press.com
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Another problem was the pins that held the Reef Balls to
the cable often didn’t release when the modules reached
the bottom the first time, and several attempts had to
be made.
Finally, high winds and currents pushed the barge
around, making accurate placement of the modules even
more difficult.
Apparently longing for the simpler method of dumping
reef material, Koepfer referred to the Reef Balls
several times as “that fancy schmancy material.”
After 41⁄2 hours of tangled buoy lines and
frustration, the Reef Balls were all in place, not
exactly where they were supposed to be, but close
enough.
The first fish visitors were three goliath grouper,
five barracuda and a bar jack, all of which probably
swam over from the nearby radio towers to see what the
commotion was all about.
“I’m sure these will make an excellent reef,” Koepfer
said. “But next time I come out, I think I’ll wear
socks, because it will have to knock my socks off to
justify the expense.” |