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RLS divers not only undertake monitoring of their local dive sites, but regularly gather in teams to survey targeted priority sites for long-term monitoring, or participate in survey expeditions to remote & international locations. The latest news from activities from the RLS network is posted here. 
RLS Return to Rottnest: Annual surveys and surprising tropical visitors

This year's annual surveys of Rottnest Island's reefs featured some warm-water species not typically seen in the area, and some heavy multitasking as visual census surveys were paired with eDNA collection at RLS sites.

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Annual Surveys of Sydney and Jervis Bay

Unseasonably warm waters made for some almost tropical diving during our last round of surveys in Sydney and Jervis Bay. Spanning from January to June 2025, RLS volunteers completed an impressive 76 surveys across 29 sites, recording a total of 157 different species in Sydney, and a further and 198 species in Jervis Bay.

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Breaking the Ice: Reef Life Survey in Iceland

An impromptu survey opportunity revealed surprising diversity in the cool, calm waters outside of Reykjavik. With a transect reel, a few datasheets, and some gift shop clipboards, a few travellers were able to complete Iceland’s first Reef Life Survey.

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RLS Technical Series #6: Eviota guttata is more complex than you'd think

Eviota guttata observations in the Reef Life Survey database have had a makeover, reflecting recently described species within what we now know to be the E. guttata complex. So, how complex is the process of telling these pygmygobies apart?

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Post-bleaching Surveys on One Tree Island

In April and May 2025, RLS divers returned to One Tree Island in the southern Great Barrier Reef for our fourth round of surveys. In 2023, a team from the University of Sydney established 26 new sites in this remote, science-only, protected lagoon system, focusing on patch reefs throughout the lagoons and sheltered reef slope. The team's goal was to understand how marine communities are influenced by environmental factors, and the Reef Life Survey methods provide a rich mix of data on fish, mobile invertebrates, corals, and other sessile organisms which underpins their research.

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