UOG’s REEF program grows more than just knowledge base of Guam and CNMI students
UOG’s REEF program grows more than just knowledge base of Guam and CNMI students
UOG’s REEF program grows more than just knowledge base of Guam and CNMI students
6/18/2026
Fellows learned a lot about coral monitoring and even more about their potential
Small islands do not mean small impact. Three undergraduate students born and raised
on Guam and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands stood before a room of
researchers, renowned scientists, and administrators and presented their work, which
they hope will have a significant impact on the Mariana Islands and beyond.
Dominic Torres, Ale’a Duenas and Angelie Denguines were all students participating
in the University of Guam Center for Island Sustainability and Sea Grant’s Research
and Environmental Education Fellowship (REEF).
The group worked with the Micronesia Coral Reef Monitoring’s (MCRM) Data Portal, which
is built to track the health of coral reefs across the region. According to the program’s
website, the MCRM is a regional program established under the Micronesia Challenge
that partners with local agencies and institutions, providing standardized coral reef
data, tools, and support to inform science-based management across Micronesia.
During the project, each student was assigned a different island to monitor. They
used AI on the Coral Net platform to help identify and analyze the site and its coral,
including their abundance and overall health.
The fellows monitored three different reefs across Yap and Kosrae, all of which showed
signs of steady decline in coral populations. Water heating events in those areas
are believed to be the reason for the decline.
According to Peter Houk, Ph.D., National Geographic project researcher and faculty
at the UOG Marine Laboratory, who also served as the research lead for this fellowship
project, monitoring of coral in the region has a lot of room to grow. Houk says this
kind of coral monitoring in the islands can be a key part of the plan to bring more
climate justice cases to the region and support broader conservation efforts.
For Saipan-born Torres, the research he was able to do can contribute to larger benefits
for the coral populations and ocean diversity around the Marianas. “I hope the fisheries
take a look at [this],” said Torres. “This data can really help to either loosen or
tighten certain regulations.”
Denguines is from Guam and has never seen herself working in the coral space. She
admitted that she was more interested in sea turtle and fisheries research, but that
after working with coral and seeing the need for help in the research area, she sees
herself doing more in that category of marine biology.
“I feel a lot of joy. I've never been one to go out and do these types of things.
Now, knowing that this can make a huge impact globally, I feel like I want people
to know more about what's going on in our world and not just the surface level," Denguines
explained.
Duenas is a student from the CNMI who has previously participated in STEM fellowships
with the NSF’s INCLUDES SEAS Islands Alliance, Guam NSF EPSCoR and other capacity-building
programs. She believes this knowledge and data can help bring improvements and betterment
to the ocean we share.
“I think it's good for the people to know more about their reefs, and kind of dive
into the causes and effects, but also what's going on now,” said Duenas. “It's really
eye-opening. It is one thing to go out and swim and just see it with your own eyes,
but it's another to look at the data and see it all on the graphs and compare it to
each other and really make those connections.”
The UOG CIS and Sea Grant REEF program is ongoing and places undergraduates with mentors
in the STEM research fields.
Following their completion of the fellowship, all three students intend to complete
their undergraduate studies and serve their islands and the region.
While the impact that the program term will have on ongoing conservation efforts may
be measurable, according to the fellows, the impacts the program can have for the
STEM workforce in the region are endless.


