Coral reefs are a hub of marine biodiversity. They provide food, recreation and shoreline protection to some 1 billion people. But reefs around the globe have seen 50 to 90 percent declines in coral abundance, and forecasts of reef health have been dire. Long-term research by scientists at the NSF Mo’orea Coral Reef LTER Site shows that reducing nutrient pollution and fish overharvesting can help reefs resist and recover from the impacts of large-scale disturbances such as coral bleaching—and may help corals survive in a warming world.
Published
Top Stories

Boxes and boxes of bees—a Sevilleta LTER dataset highlight

Site Exchange Fellows Announced

LTER Graduate Students and Postdocs Summer Mentoring Community of Practice

Collaboration with Shellfishers: an APEAL Seed Project

Letting art do the work that science cannot: Bonanza Creek’s In a Time of Change program

Request for Synthesis Proposals 2025

Site Exchange Opportunity

How to find soil-dwelling life in “the valley of the dead”

Strengthen Mentoring Skills

Ten years later: an LTER synthesis working group leads to discovery and accelerates four careers