Fine-scale time series surveys reveal new insights into spatio-temporal trends in coral cover (2002-2018), of a coral reef on the Southern Great Barrier Reef

Roelfsema, Chris, Kovacs, Eva M., , Markey, Kathryn, Rodriguez-Ramirez, Alberto, Lopez-Marcano, Sebastian, Gonzalez-Rivero, Manuel, Hoegh-Guldberg, Ove, & Phinn, Stuart R. (2021) Fine-scale time series surveys reveal new insights into spatio-temporal trends in coral cover (2002-2018), of a coral reef on the Southern Great Barrier Reef. Coral Reefs, 40(4), pp. 1055-1067.

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Description

Reef monitoring programmes often focus on limited sites, predominantly on reef slope areas, which do not capture compositional variability across zones. This study assessed spatial and temporal changes in hard coral cover at four hierarchical spatial scales. ~ 55,000, geo-referenced photoquadrats were collected annually from 2002 to 2018 and analysed using artificial intelligence for 31 sites across reef flat and reef slope zones on Heron Reef, Southern Great Barrier Reef, Australia. Trends in hard coral cover were examined at three spatial scales: (1) “reef scale”, all data; (2) “geomorphic zone scale”—north/south reef slope, inner/outer reef flat; and (3) “site scale”—31 sites. Coral cover trajectories were also examined at: (4) “sub-site scale”—sub-division of sites into 567 sub-sites, to estimate variability in coral cover trajectories via spatial statistical modelling. At reef scale coral cover increased over time to 25.6 ± 0.4 SE % in 2018 but did not recover following disturbances caused by disease (2004–2008), cyclonic conditions (2009) or severe storms (2015) to the observed pre-disturbance level (44.0 ± 0.7 SE %) seen in 2004. At geomorphic zone scale, the reef slope had significantly higher coral cover than the reef flat. Trends of decline and increase were visible in the slope zones, and the southern slope recovered to pre-decline levels. Variable coral cover trends were visible at site scale. Furthermore, sub-site spatial modelling captured eight years of coral recovery that occurred at different times and magnitudes across the four geomorphic zones, effectively estimating variability in the trajectory of the reef’s coral community. Derived spatial predictions for the entire reef show patchy coral recovery, particularly on the southern slope, and that recovery hotspots are distributed across the reef. These findings suggest that to fully understand and interpret coral decline or recovery on a reef, more accurate assessment can be achieved by examining sites distributed within different geomorphic zones to capture variation in exposure, depth and consolidation.

Impact and interest:

10 citations in Scopus
3 citations in Web of Science®
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ID Code: 232710
Item Type: Contribution to Journal (Journal Article)
Refereed: Yes
ORCID iD:
Vercelloni, Julieorcid.org/0000-0001-5227-014X
Additional Information: Funding provided by: University of Queensland; Global Change Institute at UQ, CSIRO; ARC Laureate Fellowship to Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg; ARC Linkage Grant to Prof. J Marshall and Prof. S Phinn; and WBGef Coral Reef Remote Sensing, ARC linkage innovative Coral Reef Monitoring. Fieldwork support was provided by: Coral and Reef Check Volunteers, Staff and students at University of Queensland, Heron Island Research Station, Field assistance: Rodney Borrego, Ian Leiper, Douglas Stetner, Josh Passenger, Megan Saunders, Robert Canto, Peran Bray. The constructive comments are from the reviewers of this paper.
Measurements or Duration: 13 pages
Keywords: Benthic community, Coral reef, Habitat map, Heron reef, Long-term data series, Spatiotemporal modelling
DOI: 10.1007/s00338-021-02104-y
ISSN: 0722-4028
Pure ID: 111686452
Divisions: Current > Research Centres > Centre for Data Science
Current > QUT Faculties and Divisions > Faculty of Science
Current > Schools > School of Mathematical Sciences
Funding Information: Funding provided by: University of Queensland; Global Change Institute at UQ, CSIRO; ARC Laureate Fellowship to Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg; ARC Linkage Grant to Prof. J Marshall and Prof. S Phinn; and WBGef Coral Reef Remote Sensing, ARC linkage innovative Coral Reef Monitoring. Fieldwork support was provided by: Coral and Reef Check Volunteers, Staff and students at University of Queensland, Heron Island Research Station, Field assistance: Rodney Borrego, Ian Leiper, Douglas Stetner, Josh Passenger, Megan Saunders, Robert Canto, Peran Bray. The constructive comments are from the reviewers of this paper. Funding provided by: University of Queensland; Global Change Institute at UQ, CSIRO; ARC Laureate Fellowship to Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg; ARC Linkage Grant to Prof. J Marshall and Prof. S Phinn; and WBGef Coral Reef Remote Sensing, ARC linkage innovative Coral Reef Monitoring. Fieldwork support was provided by: Coral and Reef Check Volunteers, Staff and students at University of Queensland, Heron Island Research Station, Field assistance: Rodney Borrego, Ian Leiper, Douglas Stetner, Josh Passenger, Megan Saunders, Robert Canto, Peran Bray. The constructive comments are from the reviewers of this paper.
Copyright Owner: 2021 The Authors
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Deposited On: 21 Jun 2022 05:11
Last Modified: 30 May 2024 02:53