
doi: 10.1111/rec.14317
Out‐planting corals onto coral reefs as a mechanism to increase coral cover on degraded reef systems is an increasing global activity. Current practices typically focus on asexual out‐planting of coral fragments (coral gardening). Newer sexual reproductive approaches are being developed to out‐plant younger corals produced in aquaculture facilities or sea‐based rearing pools to enable assisted evolution or assisted gene flow conservation genetics approaches. Designing out‐planting deployment operations requires decisions to be made on planting density and location in order to maximize future recruitment on both the out‐planted reefs, and on nearby reefs that are connected through oceanographic transport processes. The thinking presented here seeks to unpack how out‐planting density may be influenced, especially by local oceanographic conditions, in order to guide practitioners undertaking restoration projects.
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