Global Change Institute: New Coral Reef Rehabilitation Manual

New Coral Reef Rehabilitation Manual
The Coral Reef Targeted Research (CRTR) Program has recently released a
new Reef Rehabilitation Manual.  The manual is the culmination of
research from the CRTR Program, CRISP and ReefRES projects, and is
intended to complement the Reef Restoration Concepts & Guidelines. 

The Manual captures the experience of international research into reef
rehabilitation and seeks to reduce the proportion of reef rehabilitation
projects that fail. It provides detailed hands-on advice, based on
lessons learned from previous experience, on how to carry out coral reef
rehabilitation in a responsible and cost-effective manner.

Copies of the Manual can be downloaded or ordered from the CRTR Program
website at www.gefcoral.org from the Publications page or enter
http://www.gefcoral.org/Publications/tabid/3260/language/en-US/Default.a
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Ove Hoegh-Guldberg

Professor and Director

Global Change Institute

University of Queensland

Special thanks to Coral-list

Southeast Florida Coral Reef Initiative published science including just released: “Guidelines & Mngt. Practises for Artificial Reef Sitings, Usage, Construction and Anchoring in Southeast Florida”

http://www.dep.state.fl.us/coastal/programs/coral/reports/

This site features links to all the published science of the South East Florida Coral Reef Initiative, hosted by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, including the following topics:  

* land-based sources of pollution

* awareness and appreciation

*  fishing diving and other uses, and

*  maritime industries and coastal impacts

and including the latest document: 

” Guidelines and Management Practices for Artificial Reef Siting, Usage, Construction and Anchoring in Southeast Florida”

Coral-list: Invasion of a New Scleractinian – Tubastraea micranthus

The Atlantic Lionfish has a New Friend: 

A new species of coral has been discovered on one of the oil platforms just
southwest of the mouth of the Mississippi River.  It is Tubastraea
micranthus, a western Indo-Pacific coral which has now gained a foot-hold in
the Gulf of Mexico.  It has been sighted in the Grand Isle lease area, off
the Louisiana coast, southeast of Port Fourchon.  What makes the sighting
particularly alarming is that its sister species, Tubastraea coccinea, also
invaded the southwestern Atlantic during the 1940s.  Some fifty yrs later,
it had made its way to the northern Gulf of Mexico and has become the single
most abundant coral there.  It has been recorded from the Americas, the
Antilles, the northern Gulf of Mexico (GOM), and on many of oil and gas
platforms in the northern Gulf – inhabiting a stretch from the Florida Keys
to Brazil.  It is particularly successful on artificial substrata (bridges,
oil and gas platforms, breakwaters, etc.).  The northern Gulf of Mexico now
boasts millions of these coral colonies.  The question arises as to whether
this type of expansion will be repeated with Tubastraea micranthus, which
has used a different geographic entry point into the Atlantic than its
congener.

Paul Sammarco (Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium – LUMCON), Scott
Porter (same; and EcoLogic Environmental), and Stephen Cairns (Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, DC) have reported the first observation of this new
species – Tubastraea micranthus – in the western Atlantic.  In a recently
released paper published in Aquatic Invasions1, they raise the question as
to whether this new introduction may pose a threat similar to that of its
sister species – Tubatraea coccinea.

Sammarco and Scott, together and independently, surveyed a total of 83
platforms, including deep-water, toppled, “Rigs-to-Reefs” structures, in the
northern Gulf of Mexico for coral colonization between 2000 and 2009.
(“Rigs-to-Reefs” platforms are those platforms which have been donated by
the oil companies to the government and have been toppled either in place or
towed elsewhere to be used as artificial reefs.)  The surveys performed by
SCUBA divers stretched from Matagorda Island, Texas to Mobile, Alabama, USA,
between the depths of 7-37 m.  Five platforms were surveyed by a Remotely
Operated Vehicle (ROV) to depths of up to 117 m.  Tubastraea micranthus was
found on only one platform – Grand Isle 93C (GI-93C), off Port Fourchon,
Louisiana, near the mouth of the Mississippi River.  This location is
particularly important because it occurs at the cross-roads of two major
shipping lanes (safety fairways) transited by large international commercial
ships.  For this species to occur only on this one platform indicates that
the introduction is most likely recent.  The coral probably invaded via
larvae carried in the ballast water of a ship from the Indo-Pacific or from
an adult colony which “hitch-hiked” on the hull of a vessel.

If the growth and reproductive rates of Tubastraea micranthus (sexual and
asexual) are similar to those of Tubastraea coccinea, it is possible that
this species could similarly become a dominant in the western Atlantic.  In
addition, if its ability to out-compete its sister species and other reef
organisms that live on these hard bottoms, it is possible that local species
could be displaced.

In a sister recent study, Sammarco has determined that Tubastraea coccinea
is an “opportunistic species”.  That is, it takes advantage of new,
disturbed, or unusual habitats and does not necessarily have the capability
of dominating natural, mature ecological communities, like well-developed,
well established coral reefs.  This trait has prevented its dominating
natural reefs in western Atlantic.  It is not yet known whether Tubastraea
micranthus is similarly restricted in its growth patterns.

The question is raised as to whether it might be possible to eradicate this
species.  It is known that rapid eradication responses to new species
introductions can be highly effective, as has been the case several times in
California.  On the other hand, it is also known that waiting too long to
respond can result in domination of the new species, as has happened with
Tubastraea coccinea, the fire ant, Nutria, and the Volitan lionfish, are
ineffective.  Attempts at eradication long after integration of the new
species into the community can also cause more disturbance than the original
introduction itself.  This was demonstrated recently by the removal of
thousands of feral cats from the Australian National Heritage Site,
Macquarie Island.  This resulted in a population explosion of rabbits which
had otherwise been kept in check by the cats.  This in turn resulted in the
loss of 40% of the vegetation on the island, which is now having negative
effects on nesting bird populations on the island.  Eradication is more
effective sooner rather than later.

The fate of benthic (hard-bottom) communities in the northern Gulf of Mexico
and the western Atlantic in this case remains to be seen.

July 27, 2010

1Sammarco, P.W., S.A. Porter, and S.D. Cairns.  2010.  New invasive coral
species for the Atlantic Ocean:  Tubastraea micranthus (Cairns and Zibrowius
1997) (Colenterata, Anthozoa, Scleractinia):  A potential major threat?
Aquat. Invasions 5:  131-140.

Paul W. Sammarco                                                 Scott
Porter

Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium               Ecologic
Environmental

(LUMCON)                                                     & LUMCON

psammarco@lumcon.edu                              scottporter@ecorigs.org

Stephen D. Cairns

Smithsonian Institution

cairnss@si.edu

Paul W. Sammarco, Ph.D.

Executive Director

Association of Marine Laboratories of the Caribbean (AMLC)

and

Professor

Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium (LUMCON)

8124 Hwy. 56

Chauvin, LA  70344

USA

Tel:                1-985-851-2876

FAX:              1-985-851-2874

Email:           psammarco@lumcon.edu

Website:     www.lumcon.edu

Coral-list: NOAA 2011 Funding Opportunity–Regional Ecosystem Prediction Program: Understanding Coral Ecosystem Connectivity in the Gulf of Mexico–Pulley Ridge to the Florida Keys

 

Due Date: Full proposals are due October 21, 2010 at 3 p.m. Eastern Time.

Description:

NOAA’s Center for Sponsored Coastal Ocean Research (NOAA/CSCOR), in
partnership with the NOAA Office of National Marine Sanctuaries, Office
of Ocean Exploration and Research (NOAA/OER), National Marine Fisheries
Service Southeast Regional Office, and Gulf of Mexico Regional
Collaboration Team, is soliciting proposals for a project under the
Regional Ecosystem Prediction Program of up to 5 years in duration to
conduct research to improve the understanding of population connectivity
of key species between the southernmost portion of Pulley Ridge on the
West Florida continental shelf and downstream to the coral ecosystems of
the Florida Keys. Coral ecosystems upstream of Pulley Ridge can be
considered if directly relevant to population connectivity or to provide
context to the overall study. This information will be used to improve
the ability of Gulf of Mexico resource managers to proactively develop
strategies to manage and protect poorly understood mesophotic coral
ecosystems, including coastal and marine spatial planning and the siting
of marine protected areas and marine protected area networks for shallow
and mesophotic coral ecosystems.

One project is expected to be supported for up to 5 years, with an
annual budget up to $1,000,000. At no additional cost, up to 15 days per
year for two years of time using the MolaMola/ /AUV will be provided by
the NOAA/OER National Institute for Undersea Science and Technology.

Additionally, NOAA/CSCOR has partnered once again with NOAA/OER to
provide their expertise in administering appropriate technologies for
field-based research to support your proposal such as advanced technical
diving, autonomous underwater vehicles and remotely operated vehicles..
Operational costs for conducting the research must be included in the
proposal.

The full funding opportunity and information on how to apply can be
found on grants.gov by clicking on this link
<http://www.grants.gov/search/search.do;jsessionid=J1SvMJPTps28MQr3PWjlh3twCqmpN855Y1MLvydXJBjPJyyZVCQp%211680187280?oppId=56034&mode=VIEW>
or by searching for CFDA #11.478.

For more information, please contact Kimberly Puglise, NOAA/CSCOR,
301-713-3338 x140 or kimberly.puglise@noaa.gov
<mailto:kimberly.puglise@noaa.gov>.


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Kimberly Puglise
Center for Sponsored Coastal Ocean Research
National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science
NOAA’s National Ocean Service
1305 East-West Highway, N/SCI2
Silver Spring, MD 20910
(301) 713-3338 x140
(301) 713-4044 (Fax)