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Selecting coral species for reef restoration

Title: Selecting coral species for reef restoration
Authors: Madin, JS; McWilliam, M; Quigley, K; Bay, LK; Bellwood, D; Doropoulos, C; Fernandes, L; Harrison, P; Hoey, AS; Mumby, PJ; Ortiz, JC; Richards, ZT; Riginos, C; Schiettekatte, NMD; Suggett, DJ; van Oppen, MJH
Publisher Information: Wiley
Publication Year: 2024
Collection: University of Technology Sydney: OPUS - Open Publications of UTS Scholars
Subject Terms: 0501 Ecological Applications; 0502 Environmental Science and Management; 0602 Ecology; Ecology; 3103 Ecology; 3109 Zoology; 4104 Environmental management
Description: Humans have long sought to restore species but little attention has been directed at how to best select a subset of foundation species for maintaining rich assemblages that support ecosystems, like coral reefs and rainforests, which are increasingly threatened by environmental change. We propose a two-part hedging approach that selects optimized sets of species for restoration. The first part acknowledges that biodiversity supports ecosystem functions and services, and so it ensures precaution against loss by allocating an even spread of phenotypic traits. The second part maximizes species and ecosystem persistence by weighting species based on characteristics that are known to improve ecological persistence—for example abundance, species range and tolerance to environmental change. Using existing phenotypic-trait and ecological data for reef building corals, we identified sets of ecologically persistent species by examining marginal returns in occupancy of phenotypic trait space. We compared optimal sets of species with those from the world's southern-most coral reef, which naturally harbours low coral diversity, to show these occupy much of the trait space. Comparison with an existing coral restoration program indicated that current corals used for restoration only cover part of the desired trait space and programs may be improved by including species with different traits. Synthesis and applications. While there are many possible criteria for selecting species for restoration, the approach proposed here addresses the need to insure against unpredictable losses of ecosystem services by focusing on a wide range of phenotypic traits and ecological characteristics. Furthermore, the flexibility of the approach enables the functional goals of restoration to vary depending on environmental context, stakeholder values, and the spatial and temporal scales at which meaningful impacts can be achieved.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
ISSN: 0021-8901; 1365-2664
Relation: Journal of Applied Ecology; Journal of Applied Ecology, 2023, 60, (8), pp. 1537-1544; http://hdl.handle.net/10453/175221
Availability: http://hdl.handle.net/10453/175221
Rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Accession Number: edsbas.4392B9F2
Database: BASE