“…Their diverse and varied growth forms provide a habitat and food for the many thousands of reef‐associated organisms (Ellison et al, 2005 ; Graham, 2014 ; Knowlton et al, 2010 ; Weis et al, 2008 ), making tropical reefs centers of biodiversity. Tropical coral reefs are under pressure from a range of local and global environmental stressors (Carpenter et al, 2008 ; Kleypas et al, 1999 ; Maynard et al, 2015 ), including global warming (Bellwood et al, 2004 ; De'ath et al, 2012 ; Jokiel & Coles, 1977 ) and ocean acidification (Mollica et al, 2018 ; Tambutté et al, 2015 ); environmental pollution (Kroon et al, 2019 ; Mantelatto et al, 2020 ) – for example, microplastics (Jeyasanta et al, 2020 ; McCormick et al, 2020 ; Patterson et al, 2020 ; Patti et al, 2020 ) and heavy‐metal contamination (Banc‐Prandi et al, 2020 ; Jafarabadi et al, 2020 ; Nour & Nouh, 2020 ; Yang et al, 2020 ); and overexploitation (Heard et al, 2020 ; Natt et al, 2017 ; Robinson et al, 2016 ), making the protection and ecological restoration of coral reefs critical. Studies on these predominant reef‐building corals are, therefore, gaining widespread traction (Adjeroud et al, 2009 ; Bramanti & Edmunds, 2016 ; Cunning et al, 2018 ; Edmunds et al, 2014 ; Kayal et al, 2012 , 2015 ; Liang et al, 2017 ; Stolarski et al, 2016 ).…”