[Coral-List] Abstracts for ICRS2020: Upscaling coral reef restoration

Martin Moe martin_moe at yahoo.com
Fri Sep 6 15:39:21 UTC 2019


 
Sarah,as you know, I have a strong interest in coral reef restoration. I’m not surethat what we can do, given the restraints we face, will change or ameliorate thefuture of coral reefs, but we must do all that we can to preserve all that wecan for hopefully an environmentally sustainable future for our planet. One thingthat worries me is that we seem to be regarding a coral reef... as a coralreef. Our coral reefs are not just coral reefs, they are coral reef ecosystems.If we just stick coral frags back into a failed ecosystem, how can we expect thesefrags to generate new and vibrant coral reefs? Not that that shouldn't be done, but there must also be some efforts to restore the ecology of a coral reef, at least some effort to identify the “keystone”species that make a coral reef an ecosystem. I’m sure that there has been agreat deal of research done on the components of a coral reef ecosystem but Idon’t see much attention paid to this in the efforts that have been mounted to restorecoral reefs.One of the most critical ecological functions on our tropical westernAtlantic coral reefs is herbivory. And a good possibility for the restorationof herbivory is the restoration to ecological functionality of the keystone herbivore,the Diadema antillarum sea urchin. I worked on the mass culture of Diadema for15 years through three generations and developed the basis for a functional culture system. It is noteasy but it can be done. The Florida Aquarium Center for Conservation hasrecently been successful in spawning and rearing larvae through to earlyjuveniles. And there are other efforts underway as well. I will soon have aDiadema culture manual completed that I hope will help other efforts to workwith ecological restoration as well coral restoration.
Martin 
    On Friday, September 6, 2019, 09:57:17 AM EDT, Sarah Frias-Torres via Coral-List <coral-list at coral.aoml.noaa.gov> wrote:  
 
 We invite you to submit abstracts for:

Session 4: "What methods and techniques can upscale coral reef restoration?"

Under theme 13: Interventions and restoration

http://www.icrs2020.de/program/session-program/#c245

We welcome abstract submissions until the extended deadline of September 15, 2019.

Session Description:

As coral reefs continue to decline worldwide, combining traditional conservation

with active restoration is essential to support resilience in these threatened ecosystems.
This session will focus both on success stories and strategies for upscaling restoration:
to mass-produce bleaching-resistant reef building corals for transplantation onto degraded
reefs at the scale of hectares rather than square meters. All methods of mass coral production
(Propagation of sexual recruits, asexual propagation by fragmentation and microfragmenting)
and transplantation will be considered, including the use of new technologies and automation.
Specifically we expect presentations quantifying restoration success including:
before-after-control studies of restoration impacts on benthic and fish communities,
coral genomics, restoration to dissipate high energy in coastal environments, demographic
monitoring in site selection, development of self sustaining thickets, engagement and participation
of marginalized base communities, and case studies linking managers priorities with restoration
and vice versa.

Abstract submissions:
http://www.icrs2020.de/program/call-for-abstracts/



The Session Organizers

Chair: Sarah Frias-Torres, Vulcan Inc. (Seattle, WA, USA)

Co-Chair: Tom Moore, NOAA, USA


<><...<><...<><...

Sarah Frias-Torres, Ph.D.
Twitter: @GrouperDoc
Science Blog: https://grouperluna.com/
Art Blog: https://oceanbestiary.com/


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