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  • Title: Improving Coral Reef Restoration and Recruitment Using Native Herbivorous Crabs 
  • Principal Investigator: 
  • Funding Source: National Fish & Wildlife Foundation
  • Timeline: 06/01/20–05/30/22

Florida’s coral reefs have reached a threshold whereby their resilience has been compromised, species are endangered, and ecosystem function degraded. There is a human cost too. Coral reef-associated tourism and fishing generate about $8billion per year and support more than 70,000 jobs in the Florida Keys alone.

A big contributor to reef degradation has been the phase-shift from coral to macroalgae dominance that has diminished coral health and recruitment.

The Caribbean King Crab (Maguimithrax spinosissimus; Photo Credit: A. Jason Spadaro)

The Caribbean King Crab (Maguimithrax spinosissimus) Photo Credit: A. Jason Spadaro

We are testing a novel, two-pronged approach to coral reef restoration: (1) improve reef habitat for corals and other species by transplanting native, herbivorous crabs onto reefs to graze and reduce macroalgae, and (2) then increase coral density on reefs through coral transplantation, to help rebuild coral spawning biomass.

Listen to  talk to Butler about how crabs are helping dying coral reefs survive or read this about "reef goats" or this about crabs cleaning house for corals.

You can also dive into additional research from Butler, like .

Team

Principal Investigator


  • Walter and Rosalie Goldberg Professor of Tropical Ecology and Conservation
     mbutleri@fiu.edu

Publications

  • 2021

    Spadaro, A. J., & Butler, M. J. (2021). Herbivorous Crabs Reverse the Seaweed Dilemma on Coral Reefs.  Current Biology, 31(4), 853-859.e3.