Abstract
The degradation of coral reefs during the last decades has turned attention toward management and restoration interventions. This study seeks to operationalize coral gardening of Pocillopora spp. fragments in low profile bottom‐anchored nurseries and to compare survival and growth patterns between sites, time, and fragment size in the southern Mexican Pacific. After 357 days, fragments showed high survival (96.4%), growth rates (4.35 cm/year), and an increase in coral coverage from 3.62 ± 1.3% (mean ± SD) to 17.42 ± 4.8% (approximately 480%). Coral growth rate did not show differences between sites (pseudo‐F[1,635] = 0.21, p = 0.63), but corals grew more significantly during the upwelling season in the Gulf of Tehuantepec. According to linear and local regression analysis, the extension rate in nurseries was significantly higher when corals were smaller (<7 cm in diameter) being of relevance for operationalizing coral gardening from donor colonies; nevertheless, coral shrinkage (13.1%), when corals were smaller (i.e. during the early phases of the coral gardening protocol), calls for precaution and close monitoring. Operationalizing coral gardening of Pocillopora spp. fragments, including successful metrics in upwelling areas, are relevant for reef restoration in the eastern tropical Pacific; nevertheless, lessons regarding shrinkage and differential growth rates related to coral size should also be considered.
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