British ocean scientist Madeline St Clair’s passion for marine biology, diving and conservation photography and filmmaking made her the perfect woman to help Canon Europe and Nature Seychelles bring the reality of coral degradation to life.
Forgive us for breaking the fourth wall here, but it feels the appropriate way to introduce an exploration into virtual reality because VR takes your brain elsewhere and lets you step into someone else’s world for a short time. So before we dive into the tech, it’s important to remember that the highest achievement of VR is in making you forget that it exists. Let’s begin with why this matters…
Through Canon Europe’s partnership with Coral Spawning International and Nature Seychelles, they discovered that some of the greatest challenges for these organisations lie in education, sharing their work and the threats to our oceans – and what this means for the world.
“Biodiversity of reefs is fundamental to ocean health,” explains Dr Jamie Craggs, marine biologist and founder of CSI. “In every second breath we take, is oxygen generated from systems in the ocean. So, we need healthy oceans for healthy people.”
Right now, coral reefs are in trouble. Warmer, more polluted oceans are putting them under unprecedented levels of stress. Even an increase of just one or two degrees will cause the coral to expel the tiny algae upon which it feeds. Without it, it begins to starve and turn white – known as ‘bleaching’. As oceans become warmer, bleaching is happening more frequently, making it harder for reefs to bounce back, or simply can’t.
But showing this to the world is a tough ask, as Madeline St Clair, a coral biologist and cinematographer, knows well. She follows the mantra “you protect what you love, but you can't love what you don't know”. And, to that end, she jumped at the chance to join a small, but intrepid team, including Canon Europe’s Virtual Reality Product Specialist Mark Fensome, accepting the challenge of telling the real story of Seychelles' reefs as an immersive experience.