Coral reef restoration aims to help threatened coral ecosystems recover from recent severe declines. Here we address whether coral fragments should be out-planted individually or in larger aggregations. Theory suggests alternative possible outcomes: whereas out-plants within aggregations might suffer from heightened negative interactions with neighbors (e.g. competition for space), they may alternatively benefit from positive interactions with neighbors (e.g. buffering wave disturbances). On a degraded reef in the Caribbean (St. Croix, USVI), using out-plants of the critically endangered staghorn coral Acropora cervicornis, we experimentally tested how aggregation density (1–20 out-planted coral fragments spaced at approximately 5 cm) influ...
Over 75 % of Caribbean reefs are considered threatened, and rates of recovery are slow or impercepti...
The rapid decline of the staghorn coral Acropora cervicornis throughout the Caribbean prompted the d...
Increasing incidence of major disturbances is contributing to extensive and widespread coral loss, t...
In clonal plants and animals, stolons and runners often promote rapid directional growth and escape ...
Coral restoration is gaining traction as a viable strategy to help restore degraded reefs. While the...
Tropical reefs are commonly transitioning from coral to macroalgal dominance, producing abrupt, and ...
Reef-building coral assemblages are typically species rich, yet the processes maintaining high biodi...
While density dependence is a popular topic of research in population ecology, it has received much ...
Space availability is a key factor linked to the settlement success of marine invertebrates. Settlem...
<div><p>Background</p><p>The drastic decline in the abundance of Caribbean acroporid corals (<i>Acro...
Larval recruitment is a leading driver of community structure in the marine realm. Recovery of commu...
BACKGROUND: The drastic decline in the abundance of Caribbean acroporid corals (Acropora cervicornis...
Positive feedbacks driving habitat-forming species recovery and population growth are often lost as ...
The Janzen-Connell hypothesis predicts increased survival of early life stages with decreasing consp...
We are attempting to mitigate the disappearance of the Acroporid coral, <italic>Acropora cervicornis...
Over 75 % of Caribbean reefs are considered threatened, and rates of recovery are slow or impercepti...
The rapid decline of the staghorn coral Acropora cervicornis throughout the Caribbean prompted the d...
Increasing incidence of major disturbances is contributing to extensive and widespread coral loss, t...
In clonal plants and animals, stolons and runners often promote rapid directional growth and escape ...
Coral restoration is gaining traction as a viable strategy to help restore degraded reefs. While the...
Tropical reefs are commonly transitioning from coral to macroalgal dominance, producing abrupt, and ...
Reef-building coral assemblages are typically species rich, yet the processes maintaining high biodi...
While density dependence is a popular topic of research in population ecology, it has received much ...
Space availability is a key factor linked to the settlement success of marine invertebrates. Settlem...
<div><p>Background</p><p>The drastic decline in the abundance of Caribbean acroporid corals (<i>Acro...
Larval recruitment is a leading driver of community structure in the marine realm. Recovery of commu...
BACKGROUND: The drastic decline in the abundance of Caribbean acroporid corals (Acropora cervicornis...
Positive feedbacks driving habitat-forming species recovery and population growth are often lost as ...
The Janzen-Connell hypothesis predicts increased survival of early life stages with decreasing consp...
We are attempting to mitigate the disappearance of the Acroporid coral, <italic>Acropora cervicornis...
Over 75 % of Caribbean reefs are considered threatened, and rates of recovery are slow or impercepti...
The rapid decline of the staghorn coral Acropora cervicornis throughout the Caribbean prompted the d...
Increasing incidence of major disturbances is contributing to extensive and widespread coral loss, t...