NSW scientists leading international research to protect kelp and fisheries
On Wednesday June 3 the NSW Government announced an international team of world-class scientists, led by the Government’s NSW Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (DPIRD), is working on a ground-breaking project designed to protect underwater kelp forests and sustain our fisheries into the future.
The project is investigating how to boost the climate resilience of kelp forests to secure the future of these important marine habitats which are declining globally, including in NSW.
The research is part of Government’s Marine Estate Management Strategy 2018 - 2028 which outlines how to protect and enhance our waterways, coastline and estuaries over the next ten years.
Kelp forests provide food, shelter and breeding grounds for thousands of marine species, absorb carbon dioxide, improve water quality and help buffer coastlines from storm impacts and erosion.
Researchers from DPIRD, Dr Melinda Coleman and Dr Hugh Goold, first aim to identify climate-tolerance traits in microalgae which are easier to study, have smaller genomes and faster generation times.
The learnings from these organisms can be translated to more complex, slower growing species like golden kelp (Ecklonia radiata).
They will then develop advanced gene-editing tools that can be used in the future to enhance beneficial traits, helping improve the resilience of these critical marine ecosystems under accelerating ocean warming.
While the project is focussed on improving marine ecosystems, the research could also help pinpoint the same climate-tolerance traits in agricultural crop plants.
The project has received global interest and was selected for funding by Revive & Restore, a US-based wildlife conservation organisation which advances innovative biotechnology projects to tackle biodiversity loss.
The research will benefit from an expert team of collaborators from King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (Saudi Arabia), Laboratory of Microbial Biodiversity and Biotechnology at Banyuls-sur-Mer Oceanographic Observatory (France), and Flinders University (Australia).
Minister for Agriculture Tara Moriarty said:
“NSW fisheries are among the state’s most important sectors, generating millions in economic activity and creating thousands of jobs.
“The Minns Labor Government is committed to the effective, evidence-based management of our marine estate and sustainable fisheries management in the face of climate change and other major challenges.
“This project shows how our world-leading scientists are exploring the latest innovations in biotechnology to restore and conserve the state’s marine and coastal environments to sustain our fisheries into the future.
“It is exciting to think that the data gained from this project could later be adapted to improve the climate resilience of agricultural crops, which are crucial for our state’s economy and the livelihoods of many farmers in regional NSW.”
DPIRD Senior Principal Research Scientist Melinda Coleman said:
“Kelp forests are often underappreciated but they’re just as important as our higher profile marine habitats, like coral reefs, but they are increasingly challenged by climate change in Australia and globally.
“To keep pace with climate change, we need to start investing in innovative and transformative technologies that will allow scientists to build climate resilience into kelp forests.
“It’s vital we share the data we gather so that these proactive conservation strategies can be applied to support other important marine habitats.”
NSW DPIRD Research Scientist Dr Hugh Goold said:
“If we figure out the genetics underpinning how these organisms survive in warmer climates and apply that in restoration, we will be able to prepare our important marine habitats for climate change, and ensure value is retained by our stakeholders over coming generations.
“We will develop cutting edge tools to genetically boost climate resilience in golden kelp and will guide managers and practitioners in understanding these approaches well before we need to deploy them — preparedness is central to protect fisheries and agriculture into the future.
“While this project is focussed on improving the marine environment, the data we generate and the strategies we develop will one day be able to improve agricultural food crop climate resilience and help tackle problem weeds.”
Background
Dr Melinda Coleman
Melinda is a Principal Research Scientist with Regional NSW, DPI, whose work is transforming kelp forest conservation. Melinda does research in algal ecology, conservation and population genetics. The project will draw on Dr Coleman’s 25-year career as an international authority in marine restoration and genetics and her Green Globe award-winning efforts to reverse the loss of kelp forests across the vast NSW marine estate.
As a founding member of the Green Gravel action group and the award-winning Operation Crayweed team, Melinda is actively restoring lost kelp forests around Australia with the aim of boosting resilience to future climate change.
Operation Crayweed 2022 Update: Laura Enever, Tom Hobbs and Tom Carroll at the Bondi planting event. Photo by Frame.co
As part of a global research team, Melinda pioneered a new restoration technology “green gravel”; small rocks were seeded with kelp and reared in the laboratory until 2–3 cm, before out-planting to the field.
See: Green gravel: a novel restoration tool to combat kelp forest decline - March 2020. Nature
Also: Coleman MA, Goold HD. Harnessing synthetic biology for kelp forest conservation1. J Phycol. 2019 Aug;55(4):745-751. doi: 10.1111/jpy.12888. Epub 2019 Jun 30. Erratum in: J Phycol. 2022 Feb;58(1):182. doi: 10.1111/jpy.13228. PMID: 31152453. Phycological Society of America.
Abstract
Environmental and climatic change is outpacing the ability of organisms to adapt, at an unprecedented level, resulting in range contractions and global ecosystem shifts to novel states. At the same time, scientific advances continue to accelerate, providing never-before imagined solutions to current and emerging environmental problems. Synthetic biology, the creation of novel and engineered genetic variation, is perhaps the fastest developing and transformative scientific field. Its application to solve extant and emerging environmental problems is vast, at times controversial, and technological advances have outpaced the social, ethical, and practical considerations of its use. Here, we discuss the potential direct and indirect applications of synthetic biology to kelp forest conservation. Rather than advocate or oppose its use, we identify where and when it may play a role in halting or reversing global kelp loss and discuss challenges and identify pathways of research needed to bridge the gap between technological advances and organismal biology and ecology. There is a pressing need for prompt collaboration and dialogue among synthetic biologists, ecologists, and conservationists to identify opportunities for use and ensure that extant research directions are set on trajectories to allow these currently disparate fields to converge toward practical environmental solutions.
Dr. Melinda Coleman, Adjunct Professor, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University and the University of Western Australia. She has previously been an Australian Research Council Fellow and a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Maine, USA. She is currently co-editor of the Journal of Phycology.
Melinda leads a team of postdocs and students across government and university sectors to inform proactive marine management that anticipates and prepares for climate change. By melding ecology with genomics her team is providing new solutions for conserving and managing kelp forests in a future of increasing change.
Algal Genetic Engineering for Climate Resilience: April 21, 2026
Identifying and introducing climate resilience traits in Australian kelp, securing the future of kelp forests under accelerating ocean warming.
Team & Collaborators: Drs. Hugh Goold, Melinda Coleman, Dave Wheeler, Deborah Hailstones (NSW Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development), Dr. Kyle Lauersen (KAUST), Dr. Sheree Yau (Sorbonne/Banyuls sur Mer Oceanographic Observatory), Flinders University, South Australian Research and Development Institute, National Laboratory of the Rockies.
Challenge: Climate change is pushing kelp forests beyond their adaptive limits, underscoring the urgent need for transformative solutions.
Approach: Use genome-wide deletion libraries in compact microalgal models to experimentally identify genes controlling climate tolerance, then translate validated resilience genes into golden kelp (Ecklonia radiata) via pioneering CRISPR/Cas9 approaches, with findings integrated into the Reef Adapt decision-support platform for immediate practitioner use.
Anticipated outcomes: Experimentally validated genetic determinants of climate resilience, functional CRISPR tools for kelp genome editing, and decision-support resources for climate-smart restoration.

Dr. Melinda Coleman,
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Project Restore aims to combine the methods and technologies of four SIMS flagship projects, which to date have operated largely independently of one another.
Together, these key projects provide a template for restoration of whole seascapes within urban harbours and waterways:
- Operation Posidonia
- Operation Crayweed
- Living Seawalls
- Fish Habitat enhancement
See February 2026 Update: Project Restore at Balmoral: Modern Moorings May Protect Sydney’s Endangered Seagrass
Or February 2025 report: Project Restore: seagrass from Palm Beach Going to Sydney Harbour - Join the Storm Squad + Environmentally Friendly Moorings – Free Trial Available
Dr Hugh Goold
Dr Goold will bring his expertise in biotechnology following on from his involvement in an international consortium that successfully constructed the world’s first synthetic eukaryotic genome — a complete set of genetic information that defines an organism.
See 2025 announcement below: