Abstract

The growth and maintenance of coral-reef structures built over 1000s of years serve as the foundation for the myriad ecosystem services reefs provide to society. Predicting how reef building will change in the future is, therefore, critical to designing effective coral-reef management strategies; however, it is challenging to accurately forecast the long-term process of reef accretion based on short-term ecological studies alone. Geological records, particularly those from sensitive, marginal reef environments such as the subtropical reef system of south Florida, are essential for projecting changes in reef accretion, and for optimizing strategies for coral-reef management. Using a combination of millennial-scale reconstructions of reef accretion and paleoecology from reef cores, and contemporary carbonate budget modeling, I evaluated the past, present, and a possible future of coral-reef development in south Florida. I will show that climate has been the primary control on the rate and extent of regional reef development and, by 3000 years ago, reef accretion was negligible throughout the region. This confined the ecosystem to an unstable equilibrium in which a veneer of living coral was the only barrier to catastrophic reef erosion. In recent decades, climate and other anthropogenic disturbances have pushed many reefs into a novel state characterized by a loss of reef-building corals that is unprecedented in the geological record. These changes have unbalanced Florida’s carbonate budgets, leading to increases in reef-framework erosion. I will show that there is hope for ongoing coral restoration efforts to revive reef growth on a local scale to levels comparable to long-term natural baselines; however, the central role of climate in both the millennial-scale declines in reef building and the modern decline in coral populations suggests that the efficacy of these local efforts will be limited without global-scale action to mitigate anthropogenic climate change.

Keywords: coral reef, reef accretion, climate, restoration, species turnover

Download Vol. 60, No.2

Toth, L. T., 2023. Geological perspectives on the degradation and restoration of coral reefs. In: Abstracts of the 2nd Conservation Paleobiology Symposium. Bulletin of the Florida Museum of Natural History 60(2):60. https://doi.org/10.58782/flmnh.oxzv5621