Frontiers in Marine Science (Sep 2024)

Advancing the coral propagation toolkit via hypersalinity induced coral micropropagates

  • Emily Walton,
  • Emily Walton,
  • Lindsey Badder,
  • Claudia Tatiana Galindo-Martínez,
  • Claudia Tatiana Galindo-Martínez,
  • David B. Berry,
  • Martin Tresguerres,
  • Daniel Wangpraseurt,
  • Daniel Wangpraseurt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2024.1454887
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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In the face of escalating threats posed by human-induced climate change, urgent attention to coral reef restoration is imperative due to ongoing reef degradation. Here, we explored the potential of generating coral micropropagates as a tool to rapidly generate coral tissue for reef restoration and reef engineering. We developed a hypersalinity-induced polyp bailout protocol and a simple attachment device to support the growth of micropropagates on commonly used restoration substrates. We found that hypersalinity induction, at a rate of < 1 ppt hr-1, produced healthy micropropagates of the coral Stylophora pistillata. The highest attachment success (~74%) was achieved in CaCO3 substrate devices, which outperformed PVC (~48%) and Portland cement (~5%). Settled micropropagates displayed rapid growth rates on both CaCO3 (0.037 mm²/day ± 0.002 SE) and PVC (0.057 mm²/day ± 0.008 SE) substrates, while Portland cement induced tissue degradation. Our study provides a detailed methodology for reliably generating, attaching, and growing coral micropropagates and underscores the potential of polyp bailout as a viable technique supporting coral propagation efforts.

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