# Selective breeding enhances coral heat tolerance to marine heatwaves

*PRI Rank #12 · Topics and Trends in Most Cited Marine and fisheries research Papers, Class of 2026*

*Canonical URL: https://pri.pepkio.com/top-papers/marine-and-fisheries-research/2026/rank-12*

| Field | Value |
| --- | --- |
| Rank | #12 |
| 18m citations | 45 |
| Journal | Nature Communications |
| Year | 2024 |
| DOI | 10.1038/s41467-024-52895-1 |
| Corresponding authors | Adriana Humanes |
| Institution | Newcastle University, United Kingdom |

**Ranking page:** [Topics and Trends in Most Cited Marine and fisheries research Papers, Class of 2026](https://pri.pepkio.com/top-papers/marine-and-fisheries-research/2026)

**Paper link:** [10.1038/s41467-024-52895-1](https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-52895-1)

## Topics

Marine heatwave · Coral bleaching · selective breeding · Thermal tolerance · heritability · narrow-sense heritability · parent colony selection · adult offspring · simulated heatwave exposure · 1-week +3.5°C heat stress · 1-month +2.5°C heat stress · phenotypic variability · genetic basis · genetic correlation · short-stress tolerance · long-stress tolerance · population resilience · climate change adaptation · assisted evolution

## Cite this ranking

```
Pepkio Research Index (PRI). Topics and Trends in Most Cited Marine and fisheries research Papers, Class of 2026. https://pri.pepkio.com/top-papers/marine-and-fisheries-research/2026. Accessed 2026-07-17.

Zheng Su, Tinsley Li, Thematic Shifts in Early-High-Impact Cancer Genomics and Diagnostics Research: A Bibliometric and Semantic Analysis. bioRxiv 2026.07.04.736459; doi: https://doi.org/10.64898/2026.07.04.736459
```