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A low-tech method for monitoring survival and growth of coral transplants at a boutique restoration site

BACKGROUND: Coral reef restoration projects are becoming a popular corporate environmental responsibility activity at hotel resorts. Such involvement of private businesses offers the potential to expand restoration into a new socioeconomic sector. However, the scarcity of user-friendly monitoring me...

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Autores principales: Frias-Torres, Sarah, Reveret, Claude, Henri, Kerstin, Shah, Nirmal, Montoya Maya, Phanor Hernando
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10224673/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37250710
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.15062
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author Frias-Torres, Sarah
Reveret, Claude
Henri, Kerstin
Shah, Nirmal
Montoya Maya, Phanor Hernando
author_facet Frias-Torres, Sarah
Reveret, Claude
Henri, Kerstin
Shah, Nirmal
Montoya Maya, Phanor Hernando
author_sort Frias-Torres, Sarah
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Coral reef restoration projects are becoming a popular corporate environmental responsibility activity at hotel resorts. Such involvement of private businesses offers the potential to expand restoration into a new socioeconomic sector. However, the scarcity of user-friendly monitoring methods for hotel staff, but robust enough to detect changes over time, hinders the ability to quantify the success or failure of the restoration activity. Here, we present a monitoring method of easy application by hotel staff, without scientific training, using the standard resources available at a hotel resort. METHODS: Survival and growth of coral transplants were evaluated over 1 year at a boutique coral reef restoration site. The restoration was tailored to the needs of a hotel resort in Seychelles, Indian Ocean. A total of 2,015 nursery-grown corals of branching (four genera, 15 species), massive (16 genera, 23 species), and encrusting (seven genera, seven species) growth types were transplanted to a 1–3 m deep degraded patch reef. A unique cement mix was used to transplant corals onto the hard substrate. On the north side of each coral selected for monitoring, we attached an 8.2 cm × 8.2 cm reflective tile. We used reflective tiles instead of numbered tags due to the expected amount of biofouling growing on the tag surface. Every coral was recorded with top view photography (perpendicular to the plane of coral attachment), with the reflective square in the field of view. We drafted a map of the site to facilitate navigation and re-sighting of the monitored colonies. Then, we developed a simple monitoring protocol for hotel staff. Using the map, and the reflective tiles, the divers located the coral colonies, recorded status (alive, dead, bleaching), and took a photograph. We measured the two-dimensional coral planar area and the change in colony size over time using contour tissue measurements of photographs. RESULTS: The monitoring method was robust enough to detect the expected survival of coral transplants, with encrusting and massive corals outperforming branching corals. Survival of encrusting and massive corals was higher (50%–100%) than branching corals (16.6%–83.3%). The change in colony size was 10.1 cm(2) ± 8.8 (SE). Branching coral survivors grew faster than massive/encrusting corals. A comprehensive approach to the boutique restoration monitoring experiment would have included comparisons with a control patch reef with a similar species composition to the coral transplants. However, the ability to monitor such a control site, in addition to the restoration site, was beyond the logistic capabilities of the hotel staff, and we were limited to monitoring survival and growth within the restoration site. We conclude that science-based boutique coral reef restoration, tailored to the needs of a hotel resort, combined with a simple monitoring method, can provide a framework for involving hotels as partners in coral reef restoration worldwide.
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spelling pubmed-102246732023-05-28 A low-tech method for monitoring survival and growth of coral transplants at a boutique restoration site Frias-Torres, Sarah Reveret, Claude Henri, Kerstin Shah, Nirmal Montoya Maya, Phanor Hernando PeerJ Conservation Biology BACKGROUND: Coral reef restoration projects are becoming a popular corporate environmental responsibility activity at hotel resorts. Such involvement of private businesses offers the potential to expand restoration into a new socioeconomic sector. However, the scarcity of user-friendly monitoring methods for hotel staff, but robust enough to detect changes over time, hinders the ability to quantify the success or failure of the restoration activity. Here, we present a monitoring method of easy application by hotel staff, without scientific training, using the standard resources available at a hotel resort. METHODS: Survival and growth of coral transplants were evaluated over 1 year at a boutique coral reef restoration site. The restoration was tailored to the needs of a hotel resort in Seychelles, Indian Ocean. A total of 2,015 nursery-grown corals of branching (four genera, 15 species), massive (16 genera, 23 species), and encrusting (seven genera, seven species) growth types were transplanted to a 1–3 m deep degraded patch reef. A unique cement mix was used to transplant corals onto the hard substrate. On the north side of each coral selected for monitoring, we attached an 8.2 cm × 8.2 cm reflective tile. We used reflective tiles instead of numbered tags due to the expected amount of biofouling growing on the tag surface. Every coral was recorded with top view photography (perpendicular to the plane of coral attachment), with the reflective square in the field of view. We drafted a map of the site to facilitate navigation and re-sighting of the monitored colonies. Then, we developed a simple monitoring protocol for hotel staff. Using the map, and the reflective tiles, the divers located the coral colonies, recorded status (alive, dead, bleaching), and took a photograph. We measured the two-dimensional coral planar area and the change in colony size over time using contour tissue measurements of photographs. RESULTS: The monitoring method was robust enough to detect the expected survival of coral transplants, with encrusting and massive corals outperforming branching corals. Survival of encrusting and massive corals was higher (50%–100%) than branching corals (16.6%–83.3%). The change in colony size was 10.1 cm(2) ± 8.8 (SE). Branching coral survivors grew faster than massive/encrusting corals. A comprehensive approach to the boutique restoration monitoring experiment would have included comparisons with a control patch reef with a similar species composition to the coral transplants. However, the ability to monitor such a control site, in addition to the restoration site, was beyond the logistic capabilities of the hotel staff, and we were limited to monitoring survival and growth within the restoration site. We conclude that science-based boutique coral reef restoration, tailored to the needs of a hotel resort, combined with a simple monitoring method, can provide a framework for involving hotels as partners in coral reef restoration worldwide. PeerJ Inc. 2023-05-24 /pmc/articles/PMC10224673/ /pubmed/37250710 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.15062 Text en ©2023 Frias-Torres et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Conservation Biology
Frias-Torres, Sarah
Reveret, Claude
Henri, Kerstin
Shah, Nirmal
Montoya Maya, Phanor Hernando
A low-tech method for monitoring survival and growth of coral transplants at a boutique restoration site
title A low-tech method for monitoring survival and growth of coral transplants at a boutique restoration site
title_full A low-tech method for monitoring survival and growth of coral transplants at a boutique restoration site
title_fullStr A low-tech method for monitoring survival and growth of coral transplants at a boutique restoration site
title_full_unstemmed A low-tech method for monitoring survival and growth of coral transplants at a boutique restoration site
title_short A low-tech method for monitoring survival and growth of coral transplants at a boutique restoration site
title_sort low-tech method for monitoring survival and growth of coral transplants at a boutique restoration site
topic Conservation Biology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10224673/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37250710
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.15062
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