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Tropical and subtropical coral reefs

January 1, 2026
  • Global declines in coral cover persist, owing to increasing ocean temperatures associated with climate change, continued coastal development, pollution, sedimentation, diseases and the destruction and overextraction of marine resources (through fishing and coral harvesting). These stressors have an impact on coral biodiversity, reef-associated fauna and the architectural complexity of reef frameworks, compromising the food security and livelihoods of the millions of people who depend on these ecosystems (virtually certain, well established).
  • The frequency and severity of disturbances caused by heatwaves, disease outbreaks and tropical storms have increased (virtually certain, established but incomplete), curtailing the recovery time between such disturbances. This pattern is projected to continue on its current trajectory (at best) or accelerate (very likely).
  • The ecosystem services provided by coral reefs are substantial, not only in terms of biodiversity, but also in terms of direct economic benefits (including coastal protection, livelihoods for millions and nurseries for commercial species), as well as less tangible benefits, such as cultural and aesthetic (intrinsic) value (virtually certain, well established).
  • Conservation, restoration and regeneration efforts are under way on a global scale, but few initiatives are implemented on a long-term, sustainable basis, with socioeconomic considerations, such as livelihoods, taken into account (virtually certain, well established). A wide range of approaches and tools is being developed, many of which are designed to mitigate or halt reef declines. These are often restricted to local reef-wide projects, however, and the potential for upscaling is sometimes criticized (unresolved). Documented results are also almost always undermined by a clear disconnect between these and other policy decisions, such as the extraction and burning of fossil fuels and coastal development (likely). Regardless of scalability concerns, all programmes need to be embedded within a broader evidence-based conservation framework.
  • Global efforts are required to facilitate reef ecosystem survival and continued function by reducing emissions and ongoing climate change (virtually certain, established but incomplete). The reefs of today will not be the reefs of tomorrow (virtually certain) and shifting baselines need to be considered when setting objectives with respect to conservation, restoration and regeneration (virtually certain, established but incomplete).
Publication Year 2026
Title Tropical and subtropical coral reefs
Authors Michael J. Sweet, Maria Beger, Francesca Benzoni, Emma F Camp, Javier del Campo, Kerri L. Dobson, Nohora Galvis, Mehdi Ghodrati Shojaei, Gillian Goby, Simon Harding, Danwei Huang, Viatchelav Ivanenko, William F. Precht, Zoe Richards, Buki Rinkevich, Marie-Lise Schläppy, Curt D. Storlazzi, Parviz Tavakoli-Kolour, Karenne Tun, Sancia E.T. van der Meij, Jenny Carolina Rodriguez-Villalobos, Christian R Voolstra, Brian K Walker
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype Organization Series
Index ID 70277292
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Pacific Coastal and Marine Science Center
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