“…Moreover, abrupt changes in herbivore abundances and over-grazing have contributed to catastrophic regime shifts from vegetated to denuded states in temperate systems (Ling et al, 2009;Filbee-Dexter and Scheibling, 2014;Bennett et al, 2015;Vergés et al, 2016), while a decline of herbivores (e.g., scrapers, excavators and browsers; sensu Bellwood and Choat, 1990) on coral reefs has been closely associated with undesirable regime shifts from coral to seaweed dominated states (Bellwood et al, 2004;Mumby et al, 2006;Hughes et al, 2007). In addition to the direct effects of herbivores, many vegetated marine ecosystems such as seagrass meadows and kelp forests are in decline as a result of anthropogenic disturbances from eutrophication, climatic warming and extreme events, sediment-loading, salinity changes and invasive species (Orth et al, 2006;Waycott et al, 2009;Wernberg et al, 2013Wernberg et al, , 2016Bennett et al, 2016;Krumhansl et al, 2016). This has prompted efforts to actively revegetate coastal marine systems to curb losses and restore habitats where the initial cause of the loss has been reduced (Bastyan and Cambridge, 2008;Statton et al, 2013;Campbell et al, 2014).…”