Scientific Reports (Aug 2025)

Coral restoration can drive rapid increases in reef accretion potential

  • Lauren T. Toth,
  • Selena A. Johnson,
  • Erin O. Lyons,
  • Jason Spadaro,
  • Anastasios Stathakopoulos,
  • Sierra Bloomer,
  • Jennifer Mallon,
  • Connor M. Jenkins,
  • Sara D. Williams,
  • Ian Combs,
  • Zachary Craig,
  • Erinn Muller

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-04818-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Coral-reef degradation is disrupting the balance between reef accretion and erosion and threatening the persistence of essential coral-reef habitats. In south Florida, most reefs are already net eroding, and without intervention, valuable ecosystem services may be lost. Coral restoration holds the potential to reverse those trends; however, typical restoration monitoring does not adequately capture key geo-ecological functions. We addressed this knowledge gap using carbonate budgets and Structure-from-Motion models to evaluate the impact of coral restoration on reef-accretion potential and structural complexity at eight offshore and three inshore coral reefs in the Lower Florida Keys. Within 2–6 years following outplanting, restoration of rapidly growing A. cervicornis populations increased reef-accretion potential to 2.8 mm y− 1 and drove significant increases in structural complexity. There was no measurable impact of restoring slower-growing, massive corals on reef-accretion potential inshore; however, whereas the severe 2023 coral-bleaching event immediately following our study caused near-complete mortality of A. cervicornis, 59% of massive corals survived, highlighting potential trade-offs between coral growth and survival on future restoration efficacy. We conclude that although restoration can produce rapid, small-scale increases in reef-accretion potential, there remain important uncertainties about how and whether ecosystem-scale benefits of restoration on important geo-ecological reef functions can persist long term.