Restoration and monitoring of a vessel grounding on a shallow reef in the Florida Keys

This paper summarizes the results of a monitoring event designed to track the recovery of a repaired coral reef injured by the M/V Alec Owen Maitland vessel grounding incident of October 25, 1989. This grounding occurred within the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Pursuant to the National Mar...

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Main Author: Joe Schittone
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Vicerractoría Investigación 2010-10-01
Series:Revista de Biología Tropical
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.sa.cr/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-77442010000700014&lng=en&tlng=en
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spelling doaj-4b8b677d379042bdbb8646c76d3ab7172020-11-24T21:07:13ZengVicerractoría InvestigaciónRevista de Biología Tropical0034-77442010-10-0158suppl 3151161S0034-77442010000700014Restoration and monitoring of a vessel grounding on a shallow reef in the Florida KeysJoe SchittoneThis paper summarizes the results of a monitoring event designed to track the recovery of a repaired coral reef injured by the M/V Alec Owen Maitland vessel grounding incident of October 25, 1989. This grounding occurred within the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Pursuant to the National Marine Sanctuaries Act, NOAA recovers money for injury to Sanctuary resources, and uses it to restore those resources. A monitoring program tracks patterns of recovery, in order to determine the success of restoration measures. To evaluate success, reference habitats adjacent to the restoration site are concurrently monitored to compare the condition of restored areas with natural areas. Restoration of this site was completed in September 1995 by means of cement and limestone rock, and the monitoring results from summer 2007 are presented. Monitoring consisted of omparison of the biological conditions in the restored area with the reference area. Monitored corals are divided into the Orders: Gorgonians, Milleporans, and Scleractinians. Densities at the restored and reference areas are compared, and are shown to be greater in the restored. Size-class frequency distributions for the most abundant Scleractinians are examined, and reveal that the restoration is converging on the reference area. Also, for the Scleractinians, number and percentage of colonies by species, as well as several common biodiversity indices are provided; measures for the restored area approximate the reference area. A quantitative comparison of colony substrate settlement preference in the restored area is provided for all Orders, and for Scleractinians is further broken down for the two most frequent Genera. Rev. Biol. Trop. 58 (Suppl. 3): 151-161. Epub 2010 October 01.http://www.scielo.sa.cr/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-77442010000700014&lng=en&tlng=encoral restorationvessel groundingcoral monitoringcoral densitycoral biodiversitycoral sizeclass frequency distribution
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joe Schittone
spellingShingle Joe Schittone
Restoration and monitoring of a vessel grounding on a shallow reef in the Florida Keys
Revista de Biología Tropical
coral restoration
vessel grounding
coral monitoring
coral density
coral biodiversity
coral sizeclass frequency distribution
author_facet Joe Schittone
author_sort Joe Schittone
title Restoration and monitoring of a vessel grounding on a shallow reef in the Florida Keys
title_short Restoration and monitoring of a vessel grounding on a shallow reef in the Florida Keys
title_full Restoration and monitoring of a vessel grounding on a shallow reef in the Florida Keys
title_fullStr Restoration and monitoring of a vessel grounding on a shallow reef in the Florida Keys
title_full_unstemmed Restoration and monitoring of a vessel grounding on a shallow reef in the Florida Keys
title_sort restoration and monitoring of a vessel grounding on a shallow reef in the florida keys
publisher Vicerractoría Investigación
series Revista de Biología Tropical
issn 0034-7744
publishDate 2010-10-01
description This paper summarizes the results of a monitoring event designed to track the recovery of a repaired coral reef injured by the M/V Alec Owen Maitland vessel grounding incident of October 25, 1989. This grounding occurred within the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Pursuant to the National Marine Sanctuaries Act, NOAA recovers money for injury to Sanctuary resources, and uses it to restore those resources. A monitoring program tracks patterns of recovery, in order to determine the success of restoration measures. To evaluate success, reference habitats adjacent to the restoration site are concurrently monitored to compare the condition of restored areas with natural areas. Restoration of this site was completed in September 1995 by means of cement and limestone rock, and the monitoring results from summer 2007 are presented. Monitoring consisted of omparison of the biological conditions in the restored area with the reference area. Monitored corals are divided into the Orders: Gorgonians, Milleporans, and Scleractinians. Densities at the restored and reference areas are compared, and are shown to be greater in the restored. Size-class frequency distributions for the most abundant Scleractinians are examined, and reveal that the restoration is converging on the reference area. Also, for the Scleractinians, number and percentage of colonies by species, as well as several common biodiversity indices are provided; measures for the restored area approximate the reference area. A quantitative comparison of colony substrate settlement preference in the restored area is provided for all Orders, and for Scleractinians is further broken down for the two most frequent Genera. Rev. Biol. Trop. 58 (Suppl. 3): 151-161. Epub 2010 October 01.
topic coral restoration
vessel grounding
coral monitoring
coral density
coral biodiversity
coral sizeclass frequency distribution
url http://www.scielo.sa.cr/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-77442010000700014&lng=en&tlng=en
work_keys_str_mv AT joeschittone restorationandmonitoringofavesselgroundingonashallowreefinthefloridakeys
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