A Positive Trajectory for Corals at Little Cayman Island
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-9-2013
Abstract
Coral reefs are damaged by natural disturbances and local and global anthropogenic stresses. As stresses intensify, so do debates about whether reefs will recover after significant damage. True headway in this debate requires documented temporal trajectories for coral assemblages subjected to various combinations of stresses; therefore, we report relevant changes in coral assemblages at Little Cayman Island. Between 1999 and 2012, spatiotemporal patterns in cover, densities of juveniles and size structure of assemblages were documented inside and outside marine protected areas using transects, quadrats and measurements of maximum diameters. Over five years, bleaching and disease caused live cover to decrease from 26% to 14%, with full recovery seven years later. Juvenile densities varied, reaching a maximum in 2010. Both patterns were consistent within and outside protected areas. In addition, dominant coral species persisted within and outside protected areas although their size frequency distributions varied temporally and spatially. The health of the coral assemblage and the similarity of responses across levels of protection suggested that negligible anthropogenic disturbance at the local scale was a key factor underlying the observed resilience. © 2013 Manfrino et al.
Publication Title
PLoS ONE
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0075432
Recommended Citation
Manfrino, Carrie; Jacoby, Charles A.; Camp, Emma; and Frazer, Thomas K., "A Positive Trajectory for Corals at Little Cayman Island" (2013). Kean Publications. 2045.
https://digitalcommons.kean.edu/keanpublications/2045