Coral surveys from the nearshore reefs in Guam during 2014 (Reef Resilience in Guam project)

Website: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/639899
Data Type: Other Field Results
Version: 1
Version Date: 2016-03-08

Project
» Documenting bleaching susceptibility and resilience in Guam, Micronesia (Reef Resilience in Guam)
ContributorsAffiliationRole
Kim, KihoAmerican University (AU)Principal Investigator
Baker, David MUniversity of Hong Kong (HKU-SBS)Co-Principal Investigator
Raymundo, Laurie JUniversity of Guam Marine Laboratory (UOGML)Co-Principal Investigator
Copley, NancyWoods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)BCO-DMO Data Manager

Abstract
Coral surveys from the nearshore reefs in Guam during 2014.


Coverage

Spatial Extent: N:13.54853 E:144.81 S:13.24061 W:144.63631
Temporal Extent: 2014-01-15 - 2014-08-15

Dataset Description

Coral health survey carried out along 10 m x 5 contiguous segments, Guam 2014.


Methods & Sampling

At each of 15 sites, a 50m transect was laid out along the depth contour. Ten-meter segments were processed, equating to five 10m transects per site. The beginning and end points of transects were marked underwater and the transects were revisited three times within one year. 

Colony monitoring was conducted along the same transects as the Coral Health and Line Intercept Substrate Surveys (see related datasets). A total of 20 colonies were tagged, photographed, measured, and visible health impacts, and % colony affected were determined (as described in Coral Health Surveys, see below). Tagged colonies belonged to four common species identified as bleaching susceptible: Acropora surculosa, A. abrotenoides, Pocillopora eydouxi (now known as P. grandis) and P. damicornis. Colonies were assessed three times over one year.


Data Processing Description

BCO-DMO Processing:

- added conventional header with dataset name, PI name, version date
- renamed parameters to BCO-DMO standard
- replaced spaces with underscores; replaced commas with semicolons
- replaced blank cells with 'nd' (no data)
- added site_code, lat and lon columns
- reformatted date from d-Mon-yy to yyyy-mm-dd


[ table of contents | back to top ]

Data Files

File
colony_monitoring.csv
(Comma Separated Values (.csv), 17.40 KB)
MD5:68b53e84e860878109d8604c750c0688
Primary data file for dataset ID 639899

[ table of contents | back to top ]

Related Datasets

IsSupplementedBy
Kim, K., Baker, D. M., Raymundo, L. J. (2021) List of coral species with codes from nearshore reefs in Guam in 2014 (Reef Resilience in Guam project). Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). (Version 1) Version Date 2016-06-15 doi:10.26008/1912/bco-dmo.639865.1 [view at BCO-DMO]
Kim, K., Baker, D. M., Raymundo, L. J. (2021) Visual substrate classification along transects from the nearshore reefs in Guam during 2014 (Reef Resilience in Guam project). Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). (Version 2) Version Date 2016-06-17 doi:10.26008/1912/bco-dmo.640007.2 [view at BCO-DMO]
IsRelatedTo
Kim, K., Baker, D. M., Raymundo, L. J. (2021) Coral health survey from the nearshore reefs in Guam during 2014 (Reef Resilience in Guam project). Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). (Version 1) Version Date 2021-01-28 doi:10.26008/1912/bco-dmo.639879.1 [view at BCO-DMO]

[ table of contents | back to top ]

Parameters

ParameterDescriptionUnits
date

survey date

yyyy-mm-dd
site

survey location near Guam Island

unitless
site_code

site code

unitless
lat

latitude; north is positive

decimal degrees
lon

longitude; east is positive

decimal degrees
data_recorder

initials of person recording data

unitless
colony_id

individual colony identification number

unitless
species

taxonomic genus and species name

unitless
transect

tansect number

unitless
colony_diam

maximum colony diameter

centimeters
health_impacts

health conditions noted on colony:
ALOG; ALG; Al = fleshy algal overgrowth
BARN = barnacle Infestation
BBD = black band disease
BL; Blch = bleaching
BOAT SCRAPE; Scrapes = physical damage from contact with boat hull
BRB = brown band disease
Broken tips = physical damage from either fish bites or human contact; branch tips broken off
CCA = crustose coralline algae overgrowth
Compabr01 = unknown
COR = coralliophila predation
COTS; CTA(?) = crown of thorns predation
CYA = cyanobacteria overgrowth
DAMS; DMS =  damselfish territory
DB = unknown
DL = unknown
DRP; DRUP = drupellla predation
EF; EFI; EHM = EFI; endolithic fungal infection
FF = unknown
GA = growth anomalies
GBPRED; Donut holes + General WC crashing = goby fish predation marks; GBPRED
GD = grey death overgrowth syndrom
General rash = unknown
HPRED_maybe_0resheeting = healing predation; tissue resheeting
MCS = mucous shedding
PALE = slightly bleaching; BL
PB = partial bleaching; BL
PR = pigmentation response
PRD; PRED = yes; predation
RF; RFTDP(?) = red filamentous algae overgrowth
SA = sand abrasion
SEB = skeletal eroding band
SH = unknown
SI = silt damage
STL = subacute tissue loss
TERP; TP = Terpios sponge overgrowth
VERM = Vermetid snail boring
WS = white syndrome

unitless
colony_affected_pcent

percent of colony affected by health impacts or relative severity (low, medium, high). If multiple impacts are listed, the impact of each is shown.

unitless
comment

comments pertaining to survey

unitless
zone

reef zone: fore reef, reef flat, leeward reef patch, nearshore reef bench

unitless

[ table of contents | back to top ]

Deployments

Guam_Reef_Surveys_2014

Website
Platform
shoreside Guam
Start Date
2014-01-15
End Date
2014-08-15
Description
Coral reef bleaching was surveyed/studied near Guam in 2014 as part of the project "Documenting bleaching susceptibility and resilience in Guam, Micronesia" (NSF OCE-1418673).


[ table of contents | back to top ]

Project Information

Documenting bleaching susceptibility and resilience in Guam, Micronesia (Reef Resilience in Guam)

Coverage: Nearshore waters of Guam (13.5000° N, 144.8000° E)


Note: This project is funded by an NSF RAPID award.

Description from NSF award abstract:
Coral reef ecosystems are experiencing unprecedented levels of environmental stress. Guam, Micronesia is currently experiencing an island-wide coral bleaching event unprecedented in recent decades. The available evidence suggests that the severity and extent of this event is linked to extended high sea surface temperature and a delay in the onset of the rainy season. Initial surveys of coral reefs around the island indicate that the impacts are broad in both geographic extent and the number of coral species affected. This project will support a quantitative examination of the patterns of mortality and recovery of corals from this event in the context of reef resilience, or their ability to recover. Specifically, the project will examine whether: (a) exposure differences between the east and west sides of the island result in differential recovery, and (b) do sites that showed lower bleaching severity during initial surveys show higher recovery post-bleaching? It is predicted that differential bleaching is due, in part, to genetic differences in both the coral host and its symbiotic algae and identifying unique host-symbiont combinations that are less sensitive to extreme temperature anomalies will be a primary goal of this project. These hypotheses and predictions will be addressed by returning to a select subset of reef sites over time by a rapid response team using survey methods as employed at the NSF funded Moorea Coral Reef Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) site which includes permanent transects and fixed quadrats, and computer software to document changes in the percent cover of corals over time. Additionally, long-term monitoring of tagged colonies in the genera Acropora and Pocillopora, specifically for their recovery, and for detailed genetic analyses to examine host and symbiont genetic diversity, will help determine which combinations of host-symbiont genotypes are exhibiting recovery versus mortality.

The proposed work will reveal which specific sites, environmental conditions, and genotypes are associated with resilience to coral bleaching and will allow establishment of a system whereby long-term recovery can be documented and also compared to the Moorea LTER data on coral reef resilience. Such data sets are rare or non-existent in Micronesia and the ability to identify resilient populations can provide information to help prioritize management efforts and evaluate the performance of existing marine parks and preserves.

Further description from PI:

Survey Methods: The investigators will address these hypotheses and predictions by returning to a select subset of sites visited by the rapid response team and using survey methods as employed at the Moorea Coral Reef LTER (i.e., http://mcr.lternet.edu). On each coast, the investigators will select reef sites that have shown high (n=2) and low (n=2) levels of bleaching for a total of 8 sites. At each of the sites, they will establish permanent transacts (five 10 m transects) with fixed quadrat (0.25 m2) locations (n=40 total) for quarterly photomonitoring (see Edmunds 2013). The investigators will also deploy temperature loggers along the transects for the duration of the proposed study. Photographed quadrats will be analyzed using CPCe software as described in Adam et al (2011) to document changes in benthic cover.

To examine individual colony responses more closely, a subset of colonies from specific genera will be tagged at each site and re-assessed periodically for one year. At present, the investigators are considering Acropora spp and Pocillopora spp, as these are ecologically important, highly impacted by this event, and common to many of the sites being surveyed at present. The tagged colonies will be identified to species, and their health status documented: i.e.,  bleached, fully pigmented, re-sheeting, partial mortality, full mortality. The investigators will also look for signs of disease at the same time.

Genetic Analyses: The species selected above will be sampled for genetic analysis, to identify zooxanthellae clades present in each colony (see Gates 2011), examine host genetic diversity (e.g., Combosch & Voller 2011), and determine which combinations of host-symbiont genotypes are exhibiting recovery vs. mortality. As the event is coming to a close, and the investigators are already seeing mortality in certain species, they may be unable to sample certain highly susceptible colonies, but they will work under the assumption that surviving colonies represent the most resilient host-symbiont genotypes and certain colonies with partial mortality will allow sampling of remaining tissue.

The investigators will determine if there are associations between resilient genotypes and site-specific environmental conditions, obtaining secondary data on sea surface temperatures along the east vs. west coasts, rainfall, and wave height from NOAA and the National Weather Service. They will also document degree of exposure and distance to point sources of terrestrial inputs at each site.

Bibliography
Adam, T.C., Schmitt, R.J., Holbrook, S.J., Brooks, A.J., Edmunds, P.J., Carpenter, R.C., Bernardi, G., 2011. Herbivory, Connectivity, and Ecosystem Resilience: Response of a Coral Reef to a Large-Scale Perturbation. Plos One 6. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0023717

Combosch, D.J., Vollmer, S.V., 2011. Population Genetics of an Ecosystem-Defining Reef Coral Pocillopora damicornis in the Tropical Eastern Pacific. Plos One 6. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0021200

Edmunds, P of Moorea Coral Reef LTER. 2013. MCR LTER: Coral Reef: Long-term Population and Community Dynamics: Corals. knb-lter-mcr.4.29 (http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/knb-lter-mcr.4.29/lter).

Gates, R of Moorea Coral Reef LTER. 2011. MCR LTER: Coral Reef: Population Dynamics: Time-series of Symbiodinium populations in corals of Moorea. knb-lter-mcr.15.11 (http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/knb-lter-mcr.15.11/lter).



[ table of contents | back to top ]

Funding

Funding SourceAward
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)

[ table of contents | back to top ]