[HTML][HTML] Abiotic and biotic controls on coral recovery 16 years after mass bleaching

JPW Robinson, SK Wilson, NAJ Graham - Coral Reefs, 2019 - Springer
As climate changes increase heat stress on tropical ecosystems, the long-term persistence
of coral reefs requires rapid coral recovery following coral bleaching events. Using the …

Resilience of coral communities on an isolated system of reefs following catastrophic mass-bleaching

LD Smith, JP Gilmour, AJ Heyward - Coral Reefs, 2008 - Springer
As a result of climate change, sea-water temperatures around the world are expected to
increase, potentially causing more frequent and severe episodes of coral bleaching. In this …

[HTML][HTML] Divergent recovery trajectories of intertidal and subtidal coral communities highlight habitat-specific recovery dynamics following bleaching in an extreme …

PE Speelman, M Parger, V Schoepf - PeerJ, 2023 - peerj.com
Coral reefs face an uncertain future punctuated by recurring climate-induced disturbances.
Understanding how reefs can recover from and reassemble after mass bleaching events is …

Palau's coral reefs show differential habitat recovery following the 1998-bleaching event

Y Golbuu, S Victor, L Penland, D Idip, C Emaurois… - Coral reefs, 2007 - Springer
Documenting successional dynamics of coral communities following large-scale bleaching
events is necessary to predict coral population responses to global climate change. In 1998 …

Early recovery dynamics of turbid coral reefs after recurring bleaching events

RD Evans, SK Wilson, R Fisher, NM Ryan… - Journal of …, 2020 - Elsevier
The worlds' coral reefs are declining due to the combined effects of natural disturbances and
anthropogenic pressures including thermal coral bleaching associated with global climate …

[HTML][HTML] Depth-dependent mortality of reef corals following a severe bleaching event: implications for thermal refuges and population recovery

TCL Bridge, AS Hoey, SJ Campbell, E Muttaqin… - …, 2013 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Coral bleaching caused by rising sea temperature is a primary cause of coral reef
degradation. However, bleaching patterns often show significant spatial variability, therefore …

[HTML][HTML] Local stressors reduce coral resilience to bleaching

JE Carilli, RD Norris, BA Black, SM Walsh, M McField - Plos one, 2009 - journals.plos.org
Coral bleaching, during which corals lose their symbiotic dinoflagellates, typically
corresponds with periods of intense heat stress, and appears to be increasing in frequency …

[HTML][HTML] Uncovering drivers of juvenile coral density following mass bleaching

JC Dajka, SK Wilson, JPW Robinson, KM Chong-Seng… - Coral Reefs, 2019 - Springer
Thermally induced mass coral bleaching is globally responsible for major losses of coral
cover. Coral recovery from mass coral disturbances like the 2016 bleaching event hinges on …

[HTML][HTML] Managing recovery resilience in coral reefs against climate-induced bleaching and hurricanes: a 15 year case study from Bonaire, Dutch Caribbean

RS Steneck, SN Arnold, R Boenish… - Frontiers in Marine …, 2019 - frontiersin.org
Coral reefs are among the world's most endangered ecosystems. Coral mortality can result
from ocean warming or other climate-related events such as coral bleaching and intense …

Local management actions can increase coral resilience to thermally-induced bleaching

EC Shaver, DE Burkepile, BR Silliman - Nature ecology & evolution, 2018 - nature.com
Recent large-scale analyses suggest that local management actions may not protect coral
reefs from climate change, yet most local threat-reduction strategies have not been tested …