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Creators/Authors contains: "Karp, Richard F"

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  1. Abstract The elkhorn coral,Acropora palmata, was historically a major reef-building species in the Caribbean, but has suffered devastating declines in recent decades. Despite significant restoration efforts in Florida, the marine heatwave of 2023 caused severe bleaching and mortality to both wild and restored colonies. To understand the disastrous impacts, we evaluated the variation in heat tolerance among Florida’sA. palmatapopulation prior to the event. In 2022, we used rapid acute heat stress assays to assess the thermal tolerance of 172 adult colonies (125 unique genets) from four nurseries. We found variation in thermal tolerance (4.17°C range in ED50) that was attributed to nursery location (17.2% of variation), genet (25.9%), and symbiont abundance (15.6%). Algal symbiont type, however, was the strongest predictor of thermal performance, with the few (n = 10) colonies hostingDurusdiniumbeing, on average, 1.9°C more thermally tolerant than corals hostingSymbiodinium. This difference would have decreased the effective heat stress accumulation during the 2023 event by ~92%. Therefore, despite considerable variation in thermal tolerance among Florida’s elkhorn corals, hostingDurusdiniumappears to be the most effective mechanism for surviving such extreme heat stress. These findings suggest that restoration strategies that focus on rearing sexually derivedA. palmatarecruits withDurusdinium, followed by outplanting to suitable environments, may improve survival during future heatwaves. Combined with efforts to introduce additional elkhorn diversity from populations outside Florida, these approaches may be the most effective interventions to promote the continued survival of Florida’s elkhorn corals in the face of rapid climate change. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 1, 2026
  2. The rapid loss of reef-building corals owing to ocean warming is driving the development of interventions such as coral propagation and restoration, selective breeding and assisted gene flow. Many of these interventions target naturally heat-tolerant individuals to boost climate resilience, but the challenges of quickly and reliably quantifying heat tolerance and identifying thermotolerant individuals have hampered implementation. Here, we used coral bleaching automated stress systems to perform rapid, standardized heat tolerance assays on 229 colonies of Acropora cervicornis across six coral nurseries spanning Florida's Coral Reef, USA. Analysis of heat stress dose–response curves for each colony revealed a broad range in thermal tolerance among individuals (approx. 2.5°C range in F v /F m ED50), with highly reproducible rankings across independent tests ( r = 0.76). Most phenotypic variation occurred within nurseries rather than between them, pointing to a potentially dominant role of fixed genetic effects in setting thermal tolerance and widespread distribution of tolerant individuals throughout the population. The identification of tolerant individuals provides immediately actionable information to optimize nursery and restoration programmes for Florida's threatened staghorn corals. This work further provides a blueprint for future efforts to identify and source thermally tolerant corals for conservation interventions worldwide. 
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