npj Ocean Sustainability (Apr 2024)

Restoration as a meaningful aid to ecological recovery of coral reefs

  • David J. Suggett,
  • James Guest,
  • Emma F. Camp,
  • Alasdair Edwards,
  • Liz Goergen,
  • Margaux Hein,
  • Adriana Humanes,
  • Jessica S. Levy,
  • Phanor H. Montoya-Maya,
  • David J. Smith,
  • Tali Vardi,
  • R. Scott Winters,
  • Tom Moore

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s44183-024-00056-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 1 – 4

Abstract

Read online

Restoration supports the recovery of ecological attributes such as cover, complexity, and diversity to slow the areal decline of natural ecosystems. Restoration activity is intensifying worldwide to combat persistent stressors that are driving global declines to the extent and resilience of coral reefs. However, restoration is disputed as a meaningful aid to reef ecological recovery, often as an expensive distraction to addressing the root causes of reef loss. We contend this dispute partly stems from inferences drawn from small-scale experimental restoration outcomes amplified by misconceptions around cost-based reasoning. Alongside aggressive emissions reductions, we advocate urgent investment in coral reef ecosystem restoration as part of the management toolbox to combat the destruction of reefs as we know them within decades.