Coral colonisation of an artificial reef in a turbid nearshore environment, Dampier Harbour, western Australia.

A 0.6 hectare artificial reef of local rock and recycled concrete sleepers was constructed in December 2006 at Parker Point in the industrial port of Dampier, western Australia, with the aim of providing an environmental offset for a nearshore coral community lost to land reclamation. Corals success...

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Main Authors: David Blakeway, Michael Byers, James Stoddart, Jason Rossendell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3769252?pdf=render
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author David Blakeway
Michael Byers
James Stoddart
Jason Rossendell
author_facet David Blakeway
Michael Byers
James Stoddart
Jason Rossendell
author_sort David Blakeway
collection DOAJ
description A 0.6 hectare artificial reef of local rock and recycled concrete sleepers was constructed in December 2006 at Parker Point in the industrial port of Dampier, western Australia, with the aim of providing an environmental offset for a nearshore coral community lost to land reclamation. Corals successfully colonised the artificial reef, despite the relatively harsh environmental conditions at the site (annual water temperature range 18-32°C, intermittent high turbidity, frequent cyclones, frequent nearby ship movements). Coral settlement to the artificial reef was examined by terracotta tile deployments, and later stages of coral community development were examined by in-situ visual surveys within fixed 25 x 25 cm quadrats on the rock and concrete substrates. Mean coral density on the tiles varied from 113 ± 17 SE to 909 ± 85 SE per m(2) over five deployments, whereas mean coral density in the quadrats was only 6.0 ± 1.0 SE per m(2) at eight months post construction, increasing to 24.0 ± 2.1 SE per m(2) at 62 months post construction. Coral taxa colonising the artificial reef were a subset of those on the surrounding natural reef, but occurred in different proportions--Pseudosiderastrea tayami, Mycedium elephantotus and Leptastrea purpurea being disproportionately abundant on the artificial reef. Coral cover increased rapidly in the later stages of the study, reaching 2.3 ± 0.7 SE % at 62 months post construction. This study indicates that simple materials of opportunity can provide a suitable substrate for coral recruitment in Dampier Harbour, and that natural colonisation at the study site remains sufficient to initiate a coral community on artificial substrate despite ongoing natural and anthropogenic perturbations.
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spelling doaj.art-512d8ca7faca49099bc2749346eb6c0f2022-12-21T17:31:33ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0189e7528110.1371/journal.pone.0075281Coral colonisation of an artificial reef in a turbid nearshore environment, Dampier Harbour, western Australia.David BlakewayMichael ByersJames StoddartJason RossendellA 0.6 hectare artificial reef of local rock and recycled concrete sleepers was constructed in December 2006 at Parker Point in the industrial port of Dampier, western Australia, with the aim of providing an environmental offset for a nearshore coral community lost to land reclamation. Corals successfully colonised the artificial reef, despite the relatively harsh environmental conditions at the site (annual water temperature range 18-32°C, intermittent high turbidity, frequent cyclones, frequent nearby ship movements). Coral settlement to the artificial reef was examined by terracotta tile deployments, and later stages of coral community development were examined by in-situ visual surveys within fixed 25 x 25 cm quadrats on the rock and concrete substrates. Mean coral density on the tiles varied from 113 ± 17 SE to 909 ± 85 SE per m(2) over five deployments, whereas mean coral density in the quadrats was only 6.0 ± 1.0 SE per m(2) at eight months post construction, increasing to 24.0 ± 2.1 SE per m(2) at 62 months post construction. Coral taxa colonising the artificial reef were a subset of those on the surrounding natural reef, but occurred in different proportions--Pseudosiderastrea tayami, Mycedium elephantotus and Leptastrea purpurea being disproportionately abundant on the artificial reef. Coral cover increased rapidly in the later stages of the study, reaching 2.3 ± 0.7 SE % at 62 months post construction. This study indicates that simple materials of opportunity can provide a suitable substrate for coral recruitment in Dampier Harbour, and that natural colonisation at the study site remains sufficient to initiate a coral community on artificial substrate despite ongoing natural and anthropogenic perturbations.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3769252?pdf=render
spellingShingle David Blakeway
Michael Byers
James Stoddart
Jason Rossendell
Coral colonisation of an artificial reef in a turbid nearshore environment, Dampier Harbour, western Australia.
PLoS ONE
title Coral colonisation of an artificial reef in a turbid nearshore environment, Dampier Harbour, western Australia.
title_full Coral colonisation of an artificial reef in a turbid nearshore environment, Dampier Harbour, western Australia.
title_fullStr Coral colonisation of an artificial reef in a turbid nearshore environment, Dampier Harbour, western Australia.
title_full_unstemmed Coral colonisation of an artificial reef in a turbid nearshore environment, Dampier Harbour, western Australia.
title_short Coral colonisation of an artificial reef in a turbid nearshore environment, Dampier Harbour, western Australia.
title_sort coral colonisation of an artificial reef in a turbid nearshore environment dampier harbour western australia
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3769252?pdf=render
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AT jamesstoddart coralcolonisationofanartificialreefinaturbidnearshoreenvironmentdampierharbourwesternaustralia
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