Status of Florida's pillar coral population: in situ declines and ex situ successes
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The population of the pillar coral, Dendrogyra cylindrus, in Florida was decimated from 2013-2020, primarily by the emergence of stony coral tissue loss disease (SCTLD). Monitoring of survivors from 2021 - early 2025 showed that the population underwent an additional 96% decline in live tissue, 78% loss in living colonies, and 57% loss of genotypes. SCTLD continued to be the primary cause of these losses. Though some surviving tissue isolates exhibited small amounts of growth, the population remains extremely small, with only an estimated 9.6 square meters of tissue remaining on 23 colonies (15 genotypes). Additionally, colonies are far too dispersed to successfully fertilize spawned gametes. The further declines in the population since 2020 highlight the instability of the remnant population, as well as the value of the pillar coral rescue program and ongoing propagation efforts. As of February 2025, eight different in situ and ex situ facilities were caring for rescued D. cylindrus. Experimental fragmentation at one in situ nursery identified variable, but continually increasing, growth rates across multiple fragmentation events. Sexual propagation efforts at an ex situ nursery documented 105 different rescue fragments spawning across five years. The smallest fragment was 9 x 7 x 9 cm, establishing a potential "minimum colony size" for reproductive capacity for this species. From these spawning events, 82 juveniles were being raised ex situ in early 2025. Two of these sexually propagated juveniles spawned six years after settlement, thus establishing a potential minimum age for reproduction.