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Atoll islands are often perceived as inevitably lost due to rising sea levels. However, unlike other islands, atoll islands are dynamic landforms that have evolved, at least historically, to vertically accrete at a pace commensurate with changing sea levels. Rather than atoll islands' low elevation per se, the impairment of natural accretion processes is jeopardising their persistence. While global marine impacts are deteriorating coral reefs, local impacts also significantly affect accretion, together potentially tipping the scales toward atoll island erosion. Maintaining atoll island accretion requires intact sediment generation on coral reefs, unobstructed sediment transport from reef to island, and available vegetated deposition sites on the island. Ensuring the persistence of atoll islands must include global greenhouse gas emission reduction and local restoration of accretion processes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2023.11.004 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
July 2025
Hawai'i Institute of Marine Biology, University of Hawai'i, Mānoa, Honolulu, USA.
Despite high biodiversity and the recognized importance of mesophotic habitats, most studies of coral reef community structure have focused on conspicuous taxa such as fishes and corals in shallow habitat <30 m. Here, we examined the variability of crab assemblages from Autonomous Reef Monitoring Structures deployed on shallow reefs across the Hawaiian Islands and a mesophotic depth gradient on O'ahu. We tested the effects of environmental, ecological, and anthropogenic factors on shallow (8-17 m) crab assemblages.
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July 2025
Seychelles Islands Foundation, PO Box 853, Victoria, Seychelles.
Resilience-Based Management of coral reefs aims to maintain ecosystem function and maximise resilience. This requires identification of resilience indicators and clear ecological reference thresholds for reef managers to maintain or aim for. In the absence of local thresholds, managers can assess reef condition by comparing locally collected indicator data to broadscale thresholds, which account for spatial and temporal variability.
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July 2025
Smart Materials, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Via Morego 30, Genova, 16163, Italy.
Preserving coral reefs is crucial for safeguarding marine biodiversity, global ecosystems, and coastal communities. Coral restoration focuses on farming and transplanting corals back onto reefs. However, traditional attachment methods, such as petroleum-based epoxy, pose environmental risks or provide inefficient affixation.
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July 2025
IFREMER, IRD, Institut Louis-Malardé, Univ Polynésie française, UMR SECOPOL, Vairao, Tahiti, French Polynesia.
The ongoing biodiversity crisis calls for a complete biodiversity inventory of marine and terrestrial ecosystems. The task is particularly challenging for fragmented island territories, where baseline biodiversity information is often difficult to procure. By centralising information from different sources (museums, research institutions, citizen scientists), 'big-data' platforms provide an opportunity to evaluate species biodiversity information of understudied regions.
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June 2025
School of Life Sciences, University of Hawai'i at Mānoa, Honolulu, Hawai'i, United States.
The cryptogenic marine red alga was first observed in 2016 in subtidal habitats at Manawai (Pearl and Hermes Atoll) in the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument (PMNM), Hawai'i. Without molecular or morphological matches to any known species, it was described in 2020 and declared cryptogenic. This alga has substantially increased in benthic cover and has been discovered on two additional atolls in PMNM: Kuaihelani (Midway) and Hōlanikū (Kure).
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