Coral recruitment is critical to coral reef communities as it represents a crucial phase in the development of coral populations, important to the recovery of coral reefs affected by disturbance and mortality. Successful recruitment is important to the resilience of coral reefs, and degraded reefs often exhibit declining rates of coral recruitment through a poorly understood combination of reduced adult fecundity, decreased settlement, and higher rates of early mortality. Coral recruitment is a complex process involving gamete production, fertilisation, dispersal and development, settlement, early survival and growth. Colonisation of the benthos by invertebrates involves the three phases of (1) larval development, which includes planktonic dispersal, (2) testing of the benthos for microhabitat suitability, and (3) larval settlement on the substrate. Following larval settlement, coral spat exist as minute individuals for a period of time during which they are very difficult to detect by the observer and high mortality rates notoriously occur. Following settlement, recruitment itself is defined as the number of individuals passing from the settled phase to the stage when new members of the community become visible to be censused, after which time the individuals are commonly referred to as juveniles.