Does Protection of Marine Areas Safeguard Coral Reefs From Human-Source Pollution?

Marine biodiversity is under increasing threat as the area covered by corals diminishes under pressure from climate change and human activities, most of which lead to marine pollution. In Kenya, marine protected areas (MPAs) are the key strategy used to protect coral reefs and biodiversity. However,...

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Main Authors: Alphaxand Kaimba, Santie de Villiers, Sammy Wambua
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Environmental Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2019.00089/full
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spelling doaj-0ad6cc5fe67e4488887f19756ef4881f2020-11-25T00:28:50ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Environmental Science2296-665X2019-06-01710.3389/fenvs.2019.00089453969Does Protection of Marine Areas Safeguard Coral Reefs From Human-Source Pollution?Alphaxand Kaimba0Santie de Villiers1Santie de Villiers2Sammy Wambua3Sammy Wambua4Department of Biological Sciences (DBS), Pwani University, Kilifi, KenyaDepartment of Biochemistry & Biotechnology (DBB), Pwani University, Kilifi, KenyaPwani University Bioscience Research Centre (PUBReC), Pwani University, Kilifi, KenyaDepartment of Biological Sciences (DBS), Pwani University, Kilifi, KenyaPwani University Bioscience Research Centre (PUBReC), Pwani University, Kilifi, KenyaMarine biodiversity is under increasing threat as the area covered by corals diminishes under pressure from climate change and human activities, most of which lead to marine pollution. In Kenya, marine protected areas (MPAs) are the key strategy used to protect coral reefs and biodiversity. However, MPAs' effectiveness to prevent pollution of the reefs has not been specifically assessed. We determined if the levels of surrogates of human-source pollution, i.e., E. coli and nutrient concentrations on Kenyan coral reefs, varied with increasing levels of marine protection at the Kilifi creek (least protection), Malindi Reserve (moderate protection), and Kuruwitu Conservancy (strictest protection). The most probable number (MPN) of E. coli was estimated by serial dilution while nitrate and orthophosphate concentrations were determined spectrophotometrically. As protection increased from “least,” to “moderate” and “strictest,” E. coli concentrations (MPN/100 mL) decreased from 29, to 16 and undetectable, while mean orthophosphate concentrations increased from 0.326, to 0.422 and 0.524 mg/L, respectively. Mean nitrate concentrations, on the other hand, showed no trend with protection. These results suggest the potential of marine protection to mitigate coral reef pollution, especially from microbes. They also point to the possibility that multiple sources of pollution exist on which marine protection may have little or no effect. Significantly, this pilot study points to the need for improved study design to definitively determine the role MPAs may play in protecting against pollution.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2019.00089/fullMPA (marine protected area)E. coli—Escherichia colinutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus)coral reefspollution
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alphaxand Kaimba
Santie de Villiers
Santie de Villiers
Sammy Wambua
Sammy Wambua
spellingShingle Alphaxand Kaimba
Santie de Villiers
Santie de Villiers
Sammy Wambua
Sammy Wambua
Does Protection of Marine Areas Safeguard Coral Reefs From Human-Source Pollution?
Frontiers in Environmental Science
MPA (marine protected area)
E. coli—Escherichia coli
nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus)
coral reefs
pollution
author_facet Alphaxand Kaimba
Santie de Villiers
Santie de Villiers
Sammy Wambua
Sammy Wambua
author_sort Alphaxand Kaimba
title Does Protection of Marine Areas Safeguard Coral Reefs From Human-Source Pollution?
title_short Does Protection of Marine Areas Safeguard Coral Reefs From Human-Source Pollution?
title_full Does Protection of Marine Areas Safeguard Coral Reefs From Human-Source Pollution?
title_fullStr Does Protection of Marine Areas Safeguard Coral Reefs From Human-Source Pollution?
title_full_unstemmed Does Protection of Marine Areas Safeguard Coral Reefs From Human-Source Pollution?
title_sort does protection of marine areas safeguard coral reefs from human-source pollution?
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Environmental Science
issn 2296-665X
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Marine biodiversity is under increasing threat as the area covered by corals diminishes under pressure from climate change and human activities, most of which lead to marine pollution. In Kenya, marine protected areas (MPAs) are the key strategy used to protect coral reefs and biodiversity. However, MPAs' effectiveness to prevent pollution of the reefs has not been specifically assessed. We determined if the levels of surrogates of human-source pollution, i.e., E. coli and nutrient concentrations on Kenyan coral reefs, varied with increasing levels of marine protection at the Kilifi creek (least protection), Malindi Reserve (moderate protection), and Kuruwitu Conservancy (strictest protection). The most probable number (MPN) of E. coli was estimated by serial dilution while nitrate and orthophosphate concentrations were determined spectrophotometrically. As protection increased from “least,” to “moderate” and “strictest,” E. coli concentrations (MPN/100 mL) decreased from 29, to 16 and undetectable, while mean orthophosphate concentrations increased from 0.326, to 0.422 and 0.524 mg/L, respectively. Mean nitrate concentrations, on the other hand, showed no trend with protection. These results suggest the potential of marine protection to mitigate coral reef pollution, especially from microbes. They also point to the possibility that multiple sources of pollution exist on which marine protection may have little or no effect. Significantly, this pilot study points to the need for improved study design to definitively determine the role MPAs may play in protecting against pollution.
topic MPA (marine protected area)
E. coli—Escherichia coli
nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus)
coral reefs
pollution
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2019.00089/full
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