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  • September Member Meeting

September Member Meeting

  • September 04, 2025
  • 7:00 PM

USA Dive Club members and their guests are invited to attend either an in person meeting or a virtual meeting using Zoom.

The IN PERSON MEETING will be held at our NEW location:

Elks Pompano Beach Lodge
4000 NE Tenth Way
Pompano Beach, FL 33064

Some GPS instructions may try and bring you in off Dixie, but there is a locked gate. Please come down Sample and turn onto 12th. Park anywhere, but enter the west door with the awning, the other door is their office entrance.

To Attend the ZOOM MEETING:

You must register in advance for this meeting. Click on the link below to register. Members bringing a guest should send the guest's name and email address to president@usadiveclub.org so the guest's registration will be approved. Members and guests must register using this link.

https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/c7sOx5cTRrejivBQpczT-A

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing the link to click when it is time to join the meeting. You must register before 5:00 PM on the day of the meeting.

Please join the meeting a little early to allow time to admit people from the waiting room before the meeting starts.

We will start the meeting with 10 minutes of social time so we can catch up with our friends. Then we will turn the meeting over to our speaker.

Program:

*** Virtual (Zoom) Speaker ***

Aaron Pilnick is a marine ecologist specializing in restoration aquaculture and the ecology of foundational reef organisms. He received his B.S. in Biology from Tufts University in 2013 and his Ph.D. in Interdisciplinary Ecology from the University of Florida in 2022. His professional experience includes positions at the New England Aquarium, the National Aquarium in Baltimore, and close collaboration with The Florida Aquarium, where he worked alongside partners to develop a leading coral restoration program.

He is currently a Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Florida, where his work centers on developing aquaculture and restoration methods for sponges, sea urchins, and other invertebrates. Sponges are vital but often overlooked components of coastal ecosystems, improving water quality through filter feeding, and providing essential habitat for fish and invertebrates. In Florida, large-scale sponge die-offs have highlighted their vulnerability and the urgent need for restoration. Pilnick’s research aims to develop strategies for enhancing sponge populations on Florida’s west coast, advancing both ecosystem recovery and coastal resilience.

He is excited to return to speak with the dive club, following his last presentation on long-spined sea urchins and their role in South Florida coral reef restoration.



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