Mortality and recovery rates of Acropora fragments on in-situ nurseries after the 2023 bleaching event in the Turks and Caicos Islands
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The present study assesses the mortality or recovery of Acropora cervicornis and Acropora palmata coral fragments on in-situ ocean nurseries during the fourth global coral bleaching event, 2023–2024. Once primary reef-building corals of the Caribbean and tropical western Atlantic, A. cervicornis and A. palmata are now critically endangered species. Population management in the region has been attempted with in-situ and land-based nurseries using the coral gardening restoration concept. However, ocean nurseries are not immune to environmental stressors, and the South Caicos, Turks and Caicos Islands, nursery sites experienced 81.1% mortality during the unprecedented marine heatwave. A. cervicornis had a higher mortality rate (94.2%) than A. palmata (74.7%), and the deepest nursery site at 12.1 m depth had the lowest mortality rate at 54.8%. Further, mortality rates did not differ significantly by nursery structure type. Findings suggest that deeper nurseries are more favorable for coral recovery and survival during heating events, providing restoration practitioners with a method of nursery protection as climate stress continues to intensify for coral reefs.