Abstract
We attempted to develop practical methods for coral reef rehabilitation, by means of the production of juveniles obtained from sexual reproduction, for a remote island where recruitment is limited. Adult corals (broodstocks) of Acropora tenuis were transported 1100 km from Okinotorishima, Japan's southernmost island in the Pacific, to a hatchery in Okinawa and maintained in land tanks. Eggs were obtained from captive spawning and the resulting larvae and juvenile corals were cultured under laboratory conditions. The present methodology enabled high survivorship and led to the successful mass production of coral juveniles. A total of 564 substrates with ∼ 63 000 juvenile corals at the age of 10 mo were transported to the native reef. They were then transplanted in 3 experimental treatments, in order to evaluate effectiveness of protection by cages and/or hiding the juveniles under other substrates. Additionally, the effects of orientation on coral growth were tested by attaching the juveniles face down. The cages effectively protected the corals from predation and nibbling by fishes. The unshaded, upward facing corals in the cages steadily increased their coverage nearly 4-fold in ∼ 2 yr. © 2011 Inter-Research.
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Nakamura, R., Ando, W., Yamamoto, H., Kitano, M., Sato, A., Nakamur, M., … Omori, M. (2011). Corals mass-cultured from eggs and transplanted as juveniles to their native, remote coral reef. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 436, 161–168. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps09257
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