Negative effects by mineral accretion technique on the heat resilience, growth and recruitment of corals.

Restoration and artificial reefs can assist the recovery of degraded reefs but are limited in scalability and climate resilience. The Mineral Accretion Technique (MAT) subjects metal artificial reefs to a low-voltage electrical current, thereby creating a calcium-carbonate coating. It has been sugge...

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Main Authors: Ewout Geerten Knoester, Richard Sanders, Daisy Durden, Bulisa O Masiga, Albertinka J Murk, Ronald Osinga
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2024-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0315475
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author Ewout Geerten Knoester
Richard Sanders
Daisy Durden
Bulisa O Masiga
Albertinka J Murk
Ronald Osinga
author_facet Ewout Geerten Knoester
Richard Sanders
Daisy Durden
Bulisa O Masiga
Albertinka J Murk
Ronald Osinga
author_sort Ewout Geerten Knoester
collection DOAJ
description Restoration and artificial reefs can assist the recovery of degraded reefs but are limited in scalability and climate resilience. The Mineral Accretion Technique (MAT) subjects metal artificial reefs to a low-voltage electrical current, thereby creating a calcium-carbonate coating. It has been suggested that corals on MAT structures experience enhanced health and growth. However, prior studies report conflicting results potentially due to different conditions, species and approaches used. We investigated how MAT influences the bleaching resilience, condition and growth of four coral species and natural coral recruitment in Kenya. Coral fragments were outplanted on charged iron tables using commonly-applied settings (6 V; 0.84 A m-2). After one month, when all tables had acquired a calcium-carbonate coating, half of the tables were taken off electricity to serve as controls. Both treatments (MAT and Control) were monitored on coral brightness, condition (live tissue cover), growth and natural recruitment for one year, during which a marine heatwave occurred. Coral bleaching was significantly more severe on MAT for all studied species. For three species, coral condition dropped sharply during the heatwave and this decline was faster and more severe on MAT. Coral growth was reduced during the heatwave for all corals and remained low for one species on MAT. After one year, the Control harboured 34 coral recruits, whereas none were found on MAT. Thus, while MAT can be useful to prevent corrosion of metal artificial reefs, we do not recommend MAT as reported here to improve coral growth, condition, heat resilience or recruitment.
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spelling doaj-art-98d020f17fc04cc5bfd6ea0ad0c513d52025-01-17T05:31:58ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032024-01-011912e031547510.1371/journal.pone.0315475Negative effects by mineral accretion technique on the heat resilience, growth and recruitment of corals.Ewout Geerten KnoesterRichard SandersDaisy DurdenBulisa O MasigaAlbertinka J MurkRonald OsingaRestoration and artificial reefs can assist the recovery of degraded reefs but are limited in scalability and climate resilience. The Mineral Accretion Technique (MAT) subjects metal artificial reefs to a low-voltage electrical current, thereby creating a calcium-carbonate coating. It has been suggested that corals on MAT structures experience enhanced health and growth. However, prior studies report conflicting results potentially due to different conditions, species and approaches used. We investigated how MAT influences the bleaching resilience, condition and growth of four coral species and natural coral recruitment in Kenya. Coral fragments were outplanted on charged iron tables using commonly-applied settings (6 V; 0.84 A m-2). After one month, when all tables had acquired a calcium-carbonate coating, half of the tables were taken off electricity to serve as controls. Both treatments (MAT and Control) were monitored on coral brightness, condition (live tissue cover), growth and natural recruitment for one year, during which a marine heatwave occurred. Coral bleaching was significantly more severe on MAT for all studied species. For three species, coral condition dropped sharply during the heatwave and this decline was faster and more severe on MAT. Coral growth was reduced during the heatwave for all corals and remained low for one species on MAT. After one year, the Control harboured 34 coral recruits, whereas none were found on MAT. Thus, while MAT can be useful to prevent corrosion of metal artificial reefs, we do not recommend MAT as reported here to improve coral growth, condition, heat resilience or recruitment.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0315475
spellingShingle Ewout Geerten Knoester
Richard Sanders
Daisy Durden
Bulisa O Masiga
Albertinka J Murk
Ronald Osinga
Negative effects by mineral accretion technique on the heat resilience, growth and recruitment of corals.
PLoS ONE
title Negative effects by mineral accretion technique on the heat resilience, growth and recruitment of corals.
title_full Negative effects by mineral accretion technique on the heat resilience, growth and recruitment of corals.
title_fullStr Negative effects by mineral accretion technique on the heat resilience, growth and recruitment of corals.
title_full_unstemmed Negative effects by mineral accretion technique on the heat resilience, growth and recruitment of corals.
title_short Negative effects by mineral accretion technique on the heat resilience, growth and recruitment of corals.
title_sort negative effects by mineral accretion technique on the heat resilience growth and recruitment of corals
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0315475
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