Viralization as a microbial approach for enhancing coral reef restoration
Jason Baer, Mark Little, Jenna Aquino, Anneke van der Geer, Andrés Sánchez-Quinto, Ashton Ballard, Catherine Lawrence, Jessica Carilli, Aaron Hartmann, Forest Rohwer

TL;DR
This study shows that promoting a 'viralized' state in coral reefs, with higher virus-to-microbe ratios and better water quality, can enhance coral growth and survival.
Contribution
The paper introduces the concept of 'viralization' as a novel microbial strategy to improve coral reef restoration outcomes.
Findings
Viralized conditions in Coral Arks supported greater coral growth, survival, and biodiversity compared to degraded seafloor sites.
Higher dissolved oxygen, water flow, and light availability were associated with improved reef health in viralized states.
Despite benefits, microbial carbon metabolism trends indicated ongoing regional reef decline.
Abstract
Coral reef ecosystems rely on microorganisms to carry out biogeochemical processes essential to the survival of corals and the reef food web. However, widespread shifts from coral to algal dominance as a result of anthropogenic pressures have promoted microbial communities that compromise reef health through deoxygenation and disease. These degraded reefs become locked in a “microbialized” state characterized by high microbial biomass, low oxygen, and heightened pathogenic activity that stymie efforts to outplant corals onto the reef, a common approach applied to restore these ecosystems. Over 18 months, we compared viral and microbial dynamics alongside physical and chemical parameters (“water quality”) between two coral outplanting sites and two midwater reef mesocosms called Coral Arks. Seafloor sites exhibited microbialization, whereas Arks maintained conditions with higher viral…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCoral and Marine Ecosystems Studies · Aquaculture disease management and microbiota · Ichthyology and Marine Biology
