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Tag: Gulf

  • Gulf Breeze runner Ashton Dahlem wins Athlete of the Week award

    Gulf Breeze’s Ashton Dahlem is leading the girls cross country team as a sophomore, pushing the Dolphins to a team appearance at the Class 3A state meet this weekend in Tallahassee.

    By the way, this is her first year running cross country. Not bad, right?

    Dahlem has had a strong individual postseason, most recently placing 10th at the Region 1-3A meet in Panama City with a time of 19:08.65. While that’s her personal best, Dahlem also had a top finish at the District 1-3A meet in Niceville.

    Placing seventh at the meet, pushing Gulf Breeze to a fourth-place finish, Dahlem ran the 5-kilometer course in 19:49.90. For her efforts, Dahlem won the PNJ Athlete of the Week award for the week of Oct. 28-Nov. 2, securing 63.57% of the poll’s votes on pnj.com.

    Here’s a quick question-and-answer session with Dahlem after speaking with PNJ sports reporter Ben Grieco.

    Q & A with Gulf Breeze runner Ashton Dahlem

    Gulf Breeze's Ashton Dahlem won the PNJ Athlete of the Week award for the week of Oct. 28-Nov. 2.

    PNJ: You’re gearing up for the state meet this weekend in Tallahassee. How excited are you to go to the state meet as a sophomore?

    Ashton Dahlem: “I’m very excited. This is my first year running cross country, so I’m excited to experience this, especially with all my teammates because we’re all really close this year.”

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  • Gulf Breeze swimmer Addison Lee wins most recent PNJ Athlete of the Week award

    The 2024 high school swim season is slowly coming to an end. And Addison Lee, despite his high school career ending soon, hasn’t slowed down.

    Lee, and a handful of other Gulf Breeze swimmers, just got back from the Region 1-3A meet in Gainesville. Lee is expected to be at the FHSAA Class 3A State Meet in Ocala. Results won’t be posted until the end of the weekend.

    He has had a strong postseason, starting with a pair of first-place finishes at the Santa Rosa County Championships (that event is what pushed Lee to win Athlete of the Week). At the meet, in the 200-yard individual medley, Lee posted a time of 2 minutes, 4.51 seconds; following that up, he claimed the county crown in the 100-yard breaststroke with a time of 1 minutes, 1.72 seconds. Lee was also part of the winning 200-yard medley (1:44.90) and 400-yard freestyle (3:29.78) relays.

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  • Endangered sea corals moved to Texas Gulf Coast for research, restoration

    Endangered sea corals moved to Texas Gulf Coast for research, restoration

    DANIA BEACH, Fla. — Scientists have moved about about 300 endangered sea corals from South Florida to the Texas Gulf Coast for research and restoration.

    Nova Southeastern University and Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi researchers packed up the corals Wednesday at the NSU’s Oceanographic Campus in Dania Beach. The sea creatures were then loaded onto a van, taken to a nearby airport and flown to Texas.

    Researchers were taking extreme caution with the transfer of these delicate corals, NSU researcher Shane Wever said.

    “The process that we’re undertaking today is a really great opportunity for us to expand the representation of the corals that we are working with and the locations where they’re stored,” Wever said. “Increasing the locations that they’re stored really acts as safeguards for us to protect them and to preserve them for the future.”

    Each coral was packaged with fresh clean sea water and extra oxygen, inside of a protective case and inside of insulated and padded coolers, and was in transport for the shortest time possible.

    NSU’s marine science research facility serves as a coral reef nursery, where rescued corals are stored, processed for restoration and transplanted back into the ocean. The school has shared corals with other universities, like the University of Miami, Florida Atlantic University and Texas State University, as well as the Coral Restoration Foundation in the Florida Keys.

    Despite how important corals are, it is easy for people living on land to forget how important things in the ocean are, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi researcher Keisha Bahr said.

    “Corals serve a lot of different purposes,” Bahr said. “First of all, they protect our coastlines, especially here in Florida, from wave energy and coastal erosion. They also supply us with a lot of the food that we get from our oceans. And they are nurseries for a lot of the organisms that come from the sea.”

    Abnormally high ocean temperatures caused widespread coral bleaching in 2023, wiping out corals in the Florida Keys. Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi turned to NSU when its partners in the Keys were no longer able to provide corals for its research. Broward County was spared from the majority of the 2023 bleaching so the NSU offshore coral nursery had healthy corals to donate.

    “We’re losing corals at an alarming rate,” Bahr said. “We lost about half of our corals in last three decades. So we need to make sure that we continue to have these girls into the future.”

    Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi is using some of these corals to study the effects of sediment from Port Everglades on coral health. The rest will either help the university with its work creating a bleaching guide for the Caribbean or act as a genetic bank, representing nearly 100 genetically distinct Staghorn coral colonies from across South Florida’s reefs.

    “We wanted to give them as many genotypes, which are genetic individuals, as we could to really act as a safeguard for these this super important species,” Wever said.

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