Coral Carnival with Charlie Veron

Dates
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Cost

Included with General Admission | Drop in

Site access information

WA Museum Boola Bardip is fully accessible. Call 1300 134 081 for assistance. Accessible resources and programs >

Calling all budding Marine Scientists!

Coral reefs are called the rainforests of the sea because they are home to an incredible variety of marine life. They cover less than 1% of the ocean floor, but support about a quarter of all ocean species. 
 
Reefs also help protect our coastlines from storms, provide food for millions of people, and support local communities through tourism and fishing.
 
Learn more about coral reefs from the 'Godfather of Coral' Charlie Veron. Ever wondered why coral is coloured? How many different types of coral are there? What's it like being a coral reef researcher as well as an author? Here's your chance to find out the answers to these questions and more from our special guest, during a live Q&A session!
 
Take part in a Remida-led project to add your piece to a flourishing coral reef using recycled materials and create your own sea creature to live on the reef or take home with you. 
 
Join us up on Level 3 to join in this Coral Carnival!

 

 

A Picture of Charlie Veron in front of a leafy background
 
Charlie Veron

Charlie was the first full-time researcher on the Great Barrier Reef and the first scientist employed by the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS). He became Chief Scientist of that organisation in 1997, a position he held for 7 years. He left AIMS in 2007 to work on corals, climate change and reef conservation. He has been interviewed more than 300 times and has had a central role in 34 video productions the best known being Australian Story (ABC, 2021), The Reef (HBO, 2020), The Magnitude of All things (2020), Chasing Coral (2017). He has about 100 publications including 16 books and monographs on almost anything to do with corals from palaeontology, taxonomy and biogeography to physiology and molecular science. He has also published widely on other subjects notably evolution, mass extinctions, and most importantly, the website www.coralsoftheworld.org, (2016 and 2026). Veron's most influential reviews are his memoir A Life Underwater (Penguin 2017) and Review of coral taxonomy, evolution and diversity (4 authors, 2025)

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