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Motivations, success, and cost of coral reef restoration

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Motivations, success, and cost of coral reef restoration. / Bayraktarov, Elisa; Stewart-Sinclair, Phoebe J.; Brisbane, Shantala et al.
In: Restoration Ecology, Vol. 27, No. 5, 30.09.2019, p. 981-991.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Bayraktarov, E, Stewart-Sinclair, PJ, Brisbane, S, Bostrom Einarsson, L, Saunders, MI, Lovelock, CE, Possingham, HP, Mumby, PJ & Wilson, KA 2019, 'Motivations, success, and cost of coral reef restoration', Restoration Ecology, vol. 27, no. 5, pp. 981-991. https://doi.org/10.1111/rec.12977

APA

Bayraktarov, E., Stewart-Sinclair, P. J., Brisbane, S., Bostrom Einarsson, L., Saunders, M. I., Lovelock, C. E., Possingham, H. P., Mumby, P. J., & Wilson, K. A. (2019). Motivations, success, and cost of coral reef restoration. Restoration Ecology, 27(5), 981-991. https://doi.org/10.1111/rec.12977

Vancouver

Bayraktarov E, Stewart-Sinclair PJ, Brisbane S, Bostrom Einarsson L, Saunders MI, Lovelock CE et al. Motivations, success, and cost of coral reef restoration. Restoration Ecology. 2019 Sept 30;27(5):981-991. Epub 2019 Jun 17. doi: 10.1111/rec.12977

Author

Bayraktarov, Elisa ; Stewart-Sinclair, Phoebe J. ; Brisbane, Shantala et al. / Motivations, success, and cost of coral reef restoration. In: Restoration Ecology. 2019 ; Vol. 27, No. 5. pp. 981-991.

Bibtex

@article{38c43101d30b44c585723e6ce88f82fb,
title = "Motivations, success, and cost of coral reef restoration",
abstract = "Coral reef restoration is an increasingly important part of tropical marine conservation. Information about what motivates coral reef restoration as well as its success and cost is not well understood but is needed to inform restoration decisions. We systematically review and synthesize data from mostly scientific studies published in peer‐reviewed and gray literature on the motivations for coral reef restoration, the variables measured, outcomes reported, the cost per hectare of the restoration project, the survival of restored corals, the duration of the project, and its overall spatial extent depending on the restoration technique employed. The main motivation to restore coral reefs for the projects assessed was to further our ecological knowledge and improve restoration techniques, with coral growth, productivity, and survival being the main variables measured. The median project cost was 400,000 US$/ha (2010 US$), ranging from 6,000 US$/ha for the nursery phase of coral gardening to 4,000,000 US$/ha for substrate addition to build an artificial reef. Restoration projects were mostly of short duration (1–2 years) and over small spatial extents (0.01 ha or 108 m2). Median reported survival of restored corals was 60.9%. Future research to survey practitioners who do not publish their discoveries would complement this work. Our findings and database provide critical data to inform future research in coral reef restoration.",
keywords = "coral reef restoration, costs, motivations, project duration, project spatial extent, survival of restored corals",
author = "Elisa Bayraktarov and Stewart-Sinclair, {Phoebe J.} and Shantala Brisbane and {Bostrom Einarsson}, Lisa and Saunders, {Megan I.} and Lovelock, {Catherine E.} and Possingham, {Hugh P.} and Mumby, {Peter J.} and Wilson, {Kerrie A.}",
year = "2019",
month = sep,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1111/rec.12977",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "981--991",
journal = "Restoration Ecology",
issn = "1061-2971",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Motivations, success, and cost of coral reef restoration

AU - Bayraktarov, Elisa

AU - Stewart-Sinclair, Phoebe J.

AU - Brisbane, Shantala

AU - Bostrom Einarsson, Lisa

AU - Saunders, Megan I.

AU - Lovelock, Catherine E.

AU - Possingham, Hugh P.

AU - Mumby, Peter J.

AU - Wilson, Kerrie A.

PY - 2019/9/30

Y1 - 2019/9/30

N2 - Coral reef restoration is an increasingly important part of tropical marine conservation. Information about what motivates coral reef restoration as well as its success and cost is not well understood but is needed to inform restoration decisions. We systematically review and synthesize data from mostly scientific studies published in peer‐reviewed and gray literature on the motivations for coral reef restoration, the variables measured, outcomes reported, the cost per hectare of the restoration project, the survival of restored corals, the duration of the project, and its overall spatial extent depending on the restoration technique employed. The main motivation to restore coral reefs for the projects assessed was to further our ecological knowledge and improve restoration techniques, with coral growth, productivity, and survival being the main variables measured. The median project cost was 400,000 US$/ha (2010 US$), ranging from 6,000 US$/ha for the nursery phase of coral gardening to 4,000,000 US$/ha for substrate addition to build an artificial reef. Restoration projects were mostly of short duration (1–2 years) and over small spatial extents (0.01 ha or 108 m2). Median reported survival of restored corals was 60.9%. Future research to survey practitioners who do not publish their discoveries would complement this work. Our findings and database provide critical data to inform future research in coral reef restoration.

AB - Coral reef restoration is an increasingly important part of tropical marine conservation. Information about what motivates coral reef restoration as well as its success and cost is not well understood but is needed to inform restoration decisions. We systematically review and synthesize data from mostly scientific studies published in peer‐reviewed and gray literature on the motivations for coral reef restoration, the variables measured, outcomes reported, the cost per hectare of the restoration project, the survival of restored corals, the duration of the project, and its overall spatial extent depending on the restoration technique employed. The main motivation to restore coral reefs for the projects assessed was to further our ecological knowledge and improve restoration techniques, with coral growth, productivity, and survival being the main variables measured. The median project cost was 400,000 US$/ha (2010 US$), ranging from 6,000 US$/ha for the nursery phase of coral gardening to 4,000,000 US$/ha for substrate addition to build an artificial reef. Restoration projects were mostly of short duration (1–2 years) and over small spatial extents (0.01 ha or 108 m2). Median reported survival of restored corals was 60.9%. Future research to survey practitioners who do not publish their discoveries would complement this work. Our findings and database provide critical data to inform future research in coral reef restoration.

KW - coral reef restoration

KW - costs

KW - motivations

KW - project duration

KW - project spatial extent

KW - survival of restored corals

U2 - 10.1111/rec.12977

DO - 10.1111/rec.12977

M3 - Journal article

VL - 27

SP - 981

EP - 991

JO - Restoration Ecology

JF - Restoration Ecology

SN - 1061-2971

IS - 5

ER -