Mulà Clelia, Bradshaw Corey J A, Cabeza Mar, Manca Federica, Montano Simone, Strona Giovanni
Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Programme, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage, Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia.
Nat Ecol Evol. 2025 May;9(5):822-832. doi: 10.1038/s41559-025-02667-x. Epub 2025 Apr 8.
Coral restoration is gaining popularity as part of a continuum of approaches addressing the widespread, recurring mass mortality events of corals that-together with elevated and chronic mortality, slower growth and recruitment failure-threaten the persistence of coral reefs worldwide. However, the monetary costs associated with broad-scale coral restoration are massive, making widespread implementation challenging, especially with the lack of coordinated and ecologically informed planning. By combining a comprehensive dataset documenting the success of coral restoration with current and forecasted environmental, ecological and climate data, we highlight how such a coordinated and ecologically informed approach is not forthcoming, despite the extent of previous and ongoing efforts. We show that: (1) restoration sites tend to be disproportionally close to human settlements and therefore more vulnerable to local anthropogenic impacts; (2) the immediate outcomes of restoration do not appear to be influenced by relevant ecological and environmental predictors such as cumulative impact; and (3) most restored localities have a high and severe bleaching risk by the middle of this century, with more than half of recently restored sites already affected. Our findings highlight the need for the coral reef community to reinforce joint development of restoration guidelines that go beyond local objectives, with attention to ocean warming trends and their long-term impacts on coral resilience and restoration success.
珊瑚修复作为应对珊瑚大规模反复死亡事件的一系列方法的一部分,正日益受到关注。这些事件,连同长期升高的死亡率、缓慢的生长速度和繁殖失败,共同威胁着全球珊瑚礁的存续。然而,大规模珊瑚修复的资金成本巨大,这使得广泛实施具有挑战性,特别是在缺乏协调且基于生态知识的规划的情况下。通过将记录珊瑚修复成功的综合数据集与当前及预测的环境、生态和气候数据相结合,我们强调,尽管此前和正在进行的努力规模很大,但这种协调且基于生态知识的方法仍未出现。我们表明:(1)修复地点往往不成比例地靠近人类住区,因此更容易受到当地人为影响;(2)修复的直接结果似乎不受累积影响等相关生态和环境预测因素的影响;(3)到本世纪中叶,大多数修复地点面临高且严重的白化风险,超过一半的近期修复地点已经受到影响。我们的研究结果凸显了珊瑚礁界需要加强制定超越地方目标的修复指南,同时关注海洋变暖趋势及其对珊瑚恢复力和修复成功的长期影响。