Introduction to Coral Reef Management Online Course

Posted on: 11/06/2024 - Updated on: 6/17/2025

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Overview

The Introduction to Coral Reef Management Online Course is designed to provide marine managers and practitioners with the foundational knowledge necessary to support coral reef resilience in the face of climate change. The course consists of four lessons that explore the ecology of coral reef ecosystems, threats to reefs, management strategies for addressing local and global threats, and guidance for assessing and monitoring reefs for resilience. This new course updates and builds on the Introduction to Coral Reef Resilience Course, which was launched in 2010 and updated in 2021. This course is available in English.

To access the course, you will need to create a free ConservationTraining.org account.

Course Audience: Marine Managers and Practitioners

Duration: 4.5 hours, self-paced

Course Outline:

  • Coral Reef Ecology (75 minutes) – provides foundational information on coral reef ecology, including the coral organism (nutrition, reproduction, and growth), processes of coral bleaching, reef habitat (formation, zonation, and biogeography), reef communities (community assemblages, herbivory, and competition), and connections with other nearby habitats and human communities. This lesson also introduces principles of social-ecological resilience of reef ecosystems.
  • Threats to Coral Reefs (75 minutes) – describes threats to coral reefs, including global threats (e.g., warming seas, mass coral bleaching and ocean acidification), and regional and local threats (e.g., pollution, overfishing, and coral diseases), and the social-ecological consequences.
  • Management Strategies for Resilience (75 minutes) – describes a wide range of management strategies implemented around the world to support reef resilience. Strategies discussed include marine protected areas (MPAs) and resilient MPA design, managing for climate change impacts, reducing land-based sources of pollution, controlling invasive species, and implementing interventions to assist the recovery of degraded reefs.
  • Assessing and Monitoring Reefs (45 minutes) – provides an overview of designing monitoring programs and conducting assessments. Guidance is provided for developing routine, responsive, and participatory monitoring programs as well as assessing and monitoring reef resilience and socio-economic conditions. This lesson also compiles the latest in-depth guidance documents to assist in the development of resilience assessments.

Audience

Marine Managers and Practitioners

Managing Organizations

International Coral Reef Initiative

Managing Organizations

The Reef Resilience Network connects marine managers with resources, experts, peers, and skill-building opportunities to improve restoration and accelerate conservation of coral reefs and reef fisheries around the world.

The Nature Conservancy is the leading conservation organization working around the world to protect ecologically important lands and waters for nature and people.

The NOAA Coral Reef Conservation Program (CRCP) is a partnership between the NOAA Line Offices that work on coral reef issues: the National Ocean Service, the National Marine Fisheries Service, the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research, and the National Environmental Satellite, Data and Information Service. The CRCP brings together expertise from across NOAA for a multidisciplinary approach to managing and understanding coral reef ecosystems.