Many reef taxa are predominantly clonal, and their clones can spread over t
ens of meters and live for hundreds of years. Colony growth, which produces
large colonies, and vegetative propagation, which can generate many clonal
replicates of colonies, affect the response of clonal taxa to climate chan
ge through a variety of mechanisms, some of which mitigate and some which a
mplify effects on individuals. The large numbers of replicate individuals g
enerated among clonal taxa may enable some individuals to survive catastrop
hic mortality events such as storms and then expand following the perturbat
ion. In those circumstances clonality buffers the effects of environmental
change. Conversely, the genetic uniformity of populations dominated by few
genotypes may leave clonal taxa more susceptible to physiologic stress than
aclonal taxa, Consequently, clonal species may be more sensitive to climat
e change that has chronic and/or acute effects on survival. Chronic stresse
s that reduce recruitment will have less obvious effects on clonal taxa tha
n aclonal taxa, Under conditions of reduced recruitment, clonality will all
ow some species to persist as relict populations due to the longevity of ge
nets, The presence of relict populations has the appearance of resistance t
o climate change. In fact, these taxa are responding, but at a slower rate.
The long generation time of genets will slow the pace of evolution among c
lonal species, making adaptation at projected rates of climate change unlik
ely. The differential response of species to environmental change will lead
to transitions in community structure as climate changes.