Abstract
Anthropogenic climate change and environmental degradation destroy coral
reefs, the ecosystem services they provide, and the livelihoods of
close to a billion people who depend on these services. Restoration
approaches to increase the resilience of corals are therefore necessary
to counter environmental pressures relevant to climate change
projections. In this Review, we examine the natural processes that can
increase the adaptive capacity of coral holobionts, with the aim of
preserving ecosystem functioning under future ocean conditions. Current
approaches that centre around restoring reef cover can be integrated
with emerging approaches to enhance coral stress resilience and,
thereby, allow reefs to regrow under a new set of environmental
conditions. Emerging approaches such as standardized acute thermal
stress assays, selective sexual propagation, coral probiotics, and
environmental hardening could be feasible and scalable in the real
world. However, they must follow decision-making criteria that consider
the different reef, environmental, and ecological conditions. The
implementation of adaptive interventions tailored around nature-based
solutions will require standardized frameworks, appropriate ecological
risk–benefit assessments, and analytical routines for consistent and
effective utilization and global coordination.
Keywords
coral holobiont
adaptive capacity
assisted evolution
Beneficial Microorganisms for Corals (BMCs)
Coral probiotics
Ecosystem Restoration