Ponce Coral Reef Surveys

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Ponce Coral Reef Surveys"

Transcription

1 Ponce Coral Reef Surveys Project 301(h) Program waiver Project Number Record by: Jack Morelock, Wilson Ramirez and Christoph Schmitt Personnel for field program: Jack Morelock, Wilson Ramirez, Christoph Schmitt, Milton Carlo, Gretchen Chiques

2 Geology of the West Ponce Platform We have previously mapped the sediment pattern on the carbonate platform at Ponce (Figure 1; Acevedo, et al., 1989). Sediment accumulation and subsequent resuspension are functions of sediment sources, wave and current energies, and bathymetry. Since the nature of sediments and the amount of terrigenous sediment available is important to the discussions in this report, a brief summary of the results of our work and the publications by Beach and Trumbull (1981) and Trias (1991) will be presented. Figure 1. Sediment facies at Ponce The seaward shelf/slope unit at Ponce is the submerged shelf-edge reef system of living coral which forms the shelf-slope break and extends down the slope. The shelf breaks at 20 to 25 m depth. The reef may be a single or double ridge. The sediments on the reef are consolidated reef rock and thin patches of carbonate sands. Off Isla Ratones, pockets of fine-grained terrigenous sediment are found below 15 m. Figure 2. Sand channel in the Ponce Platform hardground The carbonate platform sediments are shoreward from the shelf-edge reef system. This is an area of hard carbonate pavement with thin carbonate sands and small patch reefs. The platform hardground has low coral growth under conditions of moderate to strong currents and variable turbidity. Sediments are present in small channels. The Ponce Basin extends to about 3 km west of Ponce Harbor and grades northward into the nearshore zone. Water depths are 12 to 34 m. The water is generally turbid with Secchi disc readings of less than 5 m. Sediments in the Ponce Basin are poorly sorted terrigenous silts and clays with small amounts of carbonate mud and sand that have been 2

3 carried in from surrounding areas and have accumulated in low-energy, deeper-water conditions. Similar sediments floor the Ponce Submarine Canyon. The northern part of the basin is dominated by dark to olive terrigenous muds. Beach (1975) measured 65 to 70 cm of mud lying over a calcareous sand, showing a change in the depositional environment. He measured sediment accumulation on an artificial reef near Ponce to get an accumulation rate of 4 mm per year for the terrigenous muds. Applying this rate to the accumulated mud blanket shows that it could have been deposited during the last 125 to 150 years. Land stripping for sugar cane, urbanization, and dredging for harbor facilities could account for increased erosion and the development of this mud accumulation. These fine sediments are resuspended by wave action and ship traffic. The resulting underwater visibility can be less than 1 m. (pers. obs.) The resuspension develops a sediment plume that is transported by currents, carrying fine sediments over the reefs within and west of the basin. The nearshore province sediments are dark, fine-grained sand to fine-grained terrigenous muds. Moderate to strong longshore drift was observed. Analysis of sediments collected showed that the samples from depths of the five meters were dominantly sands, due to wave action removal of the fine fraction. Deeper parts of the reef had more fine-grained terrigenous sediments. Bajo Tasmanian and Cardona reefs had large amounts of fine-grained terrigenous sediments and poor sediment sorting. Both areas showed finer grain size and more terrigenous sediments at 15 m, suggesting that wave energy removes some of the terrigenous fines at depths above 10 m. Cayo Ratones also showed an increase in fine terrigenous sediments with depth. Secchi readings during October 2002 gave 10 to 11 m at all sites along the route of the sewer outfall pipeline between Cardona Ridge and the outer shelf ridge. Swell and wind waves created a strong bottom surge during the survey. These resuspended sediments at the LK sites obscuring visibility. The other two sites were equally turbulent, but lacked fine-grained sediments. Status of the coral reefs 1995 The condition of coral reefs on the southwest Puerto Rico insular margin was discussed in Morelock, et al. (2001). They found greatly reduced coral cover at Ponce relative to other areas. A maximum of 18 species of corals were recorded at 10 m depth. Of these, only seven species were more than 0.5 percent cover (by species) on the eastern reefs. Montastraea cavernosa was dominant at 10 m. This coral is one of the most sediment-resistant species of the scleractinian corals. Figure 3. Coral cover by species at 10 m Ponce. The total cover of Montastraea cavernosa is not significantly different from values at La Parguera, but the reduction or 3

4 absence of other coral species changes the relative abundance and reinforces the conclusion that Montastraea cavernosa is highly tolerant to a long-term sediment stress condition. No living corals were found below 12 m at Cayo Cardona. Scope of the work October 2002 The survey at Ponce was to include the following work. The following scope of work requires that coral survey locations be established at three locations, the leak site, the south face of the Cardona Ridge and the shelf ridge. LEAK SITE (LATITUDE LONGITUDE ) Four 45 meter transects would be established at the leak site, emanating from the leak in a cross pattern: Transect 1 would extend from the Outfall leak site beginning at the edge of the rubble zone and proceeding in a northeasterly direction. Transect 2 would extend from the Outfall leak site beginning at the edge of the rubble zone and proceeding in a southeasterly direction. Transect 3 would extend from the Outfall leak site beginning at the edge of the rubble zone and proceeding in a southwesterly direction. Transect 4 would extend from the Outfall leak site beginning at the edge of the rubble zone and proceeding in a northwesterly direction. Note: The rubble zone is an area of varying width on either side of the outfall pipeline composed of excavated coralline rock and, in places, armor stone. Survey sites & survey 2002 Three sites were established: Cardona Ridge x The east line had a zero point 10 m due east of the DGPS location and the west line started at 21 m west. LK site x The north and east lines had a zero point 33 m due east of the DGPS location and the south and west lines started at 37 m west. Shelf Edge Ridge 17 o x 066 o The east line had a zero point 41 m due east of the DGPS location and the west line started at the DGPS position. All differential GPS positions were at the pipeline within the rubble zone. The leak site was referenced to the inspection chamber and leaks were seen north and south of this structure. At the leak site only the chamber stood above the rubble, but the pipeline was exposed at both of the other sites. Figure 4. Survey sites on the carbonate hardground at Ponce 4

5 Survey methodology At each survey site, we ran the following procedures The phototransect with quadrat frames to determine the coral cover by species and total coral cover. This technique is described. Identification and analysis of the non Scleractinian fauna and flora within the transect quadrats. Camrecorder video of the transect lines and the hardground environment Secchi measurements for water turbidity In addition to these contracted studies, we looked at two other aspects of the environment associated with the pipeline route Close-up photographs of coral colonies to characterize coral health which is expressed in amount of coral bleaching, coral disease, algal encroachment, color of the colony. These coral were selected within the quadrats and outside but near the line where additional species were seen. The degree of algal encroachment is especially related to the presence of nutrients in the water column. Photography and physical examination of the rubble zone to see the extent of colonization of the rubble by coral and other organisms Coral Cover Surveys Coral cover is an important index of coral reef condition. It is recognized as an important parameter in coral reef quality (Weinberg, 1981; Done, 1992). We define cover as the percentage of a unit area that is occupied by living coral. Photoquadrats were used to determine coral abundance and condition and to estimate coral cover (Morelock, 1990). In each location, 45 m transects are extended parallel to depth contours. A total of 10 quadrats are placed along each transect at random intervals, with each quadrat (70 x 100 cm; 0.7 m 2 area) positioned such that the narrow (70 cm length) side is parallel to the line. Numbered tags are placed next to each coral within the quadrat to assist in identification of the corals. Figure 4. Photo survey transect line For each quadrat, one diver records the coral species associated with each number, and notes the condition of the coral. A second diver photographs the quadrat. All quadrats are photographed from a planar perspective at a vertical distance of 1.2 m above the quadrat. This distance is maintained by using a 1.2 m stick. Although variation from true vertical to the surface 5

6 may introduce cover errors, these are slight. Cover is underestimated because the photo is a planar projection of threedimensional coral. We use digital cameras (Olympus 3040) in underwater housings to obtain a 10 x 7.5 inch 200 dpi digital image. Figure 5. Photo survey quadrat. Coral cover is determined for each quadrat using the Deneba Canvas area measuring function. Initially, individual corals are identified on the image and the perimeter of the coral is marked. The individual corals are traced on the image and measured to determine the area in cm 2 relative to the area of the image. All data are entered into a spreadsheet in order to calculate percent cover by species and total cover for each quadrat and for the total transect, average colony size, and number of colonies. In this study, "coral cover" is defined as the amount of the total bottom area occupied by living coral colonies within an entire area that includes sand channels and bare areas. Whenever possible, corals identified within quadrats were recorded to species level. Although the Montastraea annularis group (species complex) have been subdivided into three species as proposed by Knowleton, et al. (1992) many of the surveys used were made before the introduction of new species. Therefore, the cover is designated the Montastraea annularis group and the individual species are not distinguished. Forms or morphotypes of Agaricia agaricites, Porites porites and Meandrina meandrites were not differentiated. In addition, encrusting colonies of Madracis were recorded as Madracis decactis. In this study, we only recognized one species of Stephanocoenia (Stephanocoenia intersepta) and one species of Dichocoenia (Dichocoenia stokesii). The percent cover by all Mycetophyllia species and Diploria species was so low that both are recorded only to genera. Flora & fauna survey methodology Species diversity and abundance of gorgonians, cnidarians, hydrozoans and sponges were estimated for the transect lines. Total counts were obtained for all. All quadrats were examined in the field and on the quadrat images. At each site, percent cover in ten randomly placed quadrates along the transects was estimated. In general, all sites were characterized by the dominance of two invertebrate groups, gorgonians and sponges. With the exception of occasional species of Halimeda, macro algae were virtually absent on all sites. 6

7 Video Surveys Video of the transects and general video views over the areas of investigation provides a visual record which can be compared to later surveys, and, if necessary, we can obtain individual stills from the video. EPA is using video transects to measure coral cover on reefs. We had a better record (improved resolution and control of the quadrat photos) using still photography. The video does give an excellent overview of the entire area and has the qualitative value of showing algal abundance and coral vitality from larger scale or perspective. Coral health and vitality: Photographic analysis of individual coral colonies The Olympus digital cameras (Olympus 3040 in Tetra underwater housing with Nikonos 105 strobe and Olympus 3040 in Ikelite underwater housing with Ikelite strobe) were used to photograph individual coral colonies in the quadrat frames, near the transect lines and in the rubble zone. The photos were taken haphazardly in order to have several photographs of the typical species found in the local area. The digital image is 10 x 7.5 inches with 200 dpi resolution. In the computer, these images can be enlarged to see details of the colony. Each photo was assessed based on color, signs of bleaching, algal competition, and coral disease (Figure 6). If the coral appeared to be of a normal color, it was scored as a five, if the color was faded or blotchy, it was scored 4 to 1, based on the condition (with 1 being the worst condition). In a similar manner, we scored bleaching conditions, algal competition, and disease. Figure 6. Examples of black band disease, bleaching, algal mat overgrowth and normal healthy coral 7

8 Data for Cardona Ridge & Shelf Ridge and Leak Site Coral Coral cover measured in the present survey and in 1993 is presented in Figure 7. Figure 7. Coral cover by species at 9 13 meters on the west Ponce carbonate platform. The October 2002 surveys were run to either side of the pipeline rubble zone. Coral colony distribution at the three sites is not evenly dispersed. Coral colonies tend to occur in clumps separated by sand and bare rock which may have small colonies of coral. These coral have an area of about 100 cm 2 for the Montastraea annularis, Porites asteroides and Diploria. The other species are smaller colonies (Figure 8). 8

9 Figure 8. Coral colonies photographed within a quadrat. Tag 19 marks a Montastraea cavernosa colony. The cover for the east and west transects at Cardona Ridge were similar, but lower than the results from This does not seem to represent a general loss of coral on the ridge, but variation in amount of coral cover on what is a hardground (defined as having less than 6% living coral on the surface). The Outer Ridge results were very similar for the two October 2002 transects and for the comparison to the 1993 survey both in total coral cover and in cover by species. This ridge is also hardground with small clumps of coral and heavy cover by soft coral, gorgonians and sponge. These hardgrounds have only a limited amount of coral cover, supplied by only a few species as shown in Table 1. Table 1. Cover on the hardground environment Coral species Cover by species for the 1993 & 2002 surveys Coral species in the quadrats covering 1.0 to 0.1 percent of the surface Montastraea cavernosa 1.0 Agaricia agaricites 0.5 Montastraea annularis 0.3 Porites asteroides 0.2 Siderastrea siderea 0.2 Diploria strigosa 0.1 Diploria clivosa 0.1 Coral species in the quadrats less than 0.05 percent of surface Madracis decactis Dichocoenia stokesii Isophyllia sinuosa Scolymia Individual coral found outside the quadrats Montastraea annularis this coral was measured in 1993, occurs as larger, individual colonies Meandrina meandrites Porites porites Stephanocoenia intersepta Diploria labyrinthiformis 9

10 The nature of the hardground can be seen in Figure 9. Figure 9. Surface of the hardground typical of the outer ridge and Cardona Ridge. The Montastraea cavernosa in the foreground has a diameter of about 15 cm. The average coral cover was 2.6 percent of the surface covered with living coral, and this was only seven species of coral (Table 2). Eight other coral species were found during the surveys the coral can be seen in the plates for coral health analysis. Table 2. Coral cover on the west Ponce carbonate platform. Surveys locations run in 1993 at Cardona Ridge and the Shelf Ridge are now part of the pipeline rubble zone. location depth (m) total coral cover Montastraea annularis Montastraea cavernosa Agaricia agaricites Porites asteroides Siderastrea siderea Diploria strigosa Diploria clivosa Madracis decactis Dichocoenia stokesii latitude longitude month-year Cardona Ridge ' t Jan-93 Cardona Ridge east Oct-02 Cardona Ridge west Oct-02 all Cardona Ridge LKt1N Oct-02 LKt2E Oct-02 LKt3S Oct-02 LKt4W Oct-02 all LK transects Outer Ridge ' Jan-93 Outer Ridge east Oct-02 Outer Ridge west Oct-02 all Outer Ridge

11 Coral cover on the lower surface (13 m) to either side of the leak site had an average cover of 0.8 percent living coral. Only three species (Montastraea cavernosa, Siderastrea siderea and Diploria clivosa) were present as more than 0.1 percent cover. Only three other species were present (Agaricia agaricites, Dichocoenia stokesii and Isophyllia sinuosa). Besides the greater depth, this part of the hardground platform had finer sediments which were suspended by wave action to produce greater water turbidity near the bottom. Juvenile recruitment was seen on all transect lines. Flora and Fauna In general, all sites were characterized by the dominance of two invertebrate groups: gorgonians and sponges (Table 3; Figure 10). The species composition of the gorgonians, notably the presence of species like Muricea, Eunicea and Pterogorgia is indicative of an environment with strong hydrodynamics and low topographic relief with potential strong sediment transport regimes (Figure 11). Sponges also showed growth pattern (e.g. more encrusting vs. erect) that was indicative of strong hydrodynamics. Table 3. Pooled abundances of major groups LK N LK S LK E LK W SR E SR W CR E CR W Gorgonians Sponges Crustose Coralline Algae Pooled species abundances %cover Gorgonians Sponges CCA LK N LK S LK E LK W SR E SR W CR E CR W survey sites Figure 10. Pooled species abundances for the transects 11

12 Figure 11. Rock knob with soft flora & fauna near transect LK1N. The soft flora & fauna are generally restricted to rock attachment substrate. The most abundant gorgonian species were members of the genus Pseudopterogorgia, whereas Ampimedon compressa and Iotrocha birotula dominated the sponge fauna on most sites (Table 4). The transects CR east and CR west had by far the highest abundance of both Gorgonians and Sponges. Sites SR-E and SR-W had slightly higher cover than the four sites at LK. However, the height of gorgonians was substantially larger at sites at SR than at the LK sites. The four sites at LK had the lowest abundance and the smallest sizes of species. Within the transects around the leak area, LK-N and LK-S had the lowest abundance of species with LK-S standing out as the site where sponges and gorgonians were close to absent. The low cover at LK north and LK south can partially be explained by the substrate type, which only in these two sites essentially consisted of unconsolidated rubble. This makes it very difficult for sessile organism to colonize. It is probably for this reason that these sites were the only ones where Crustose Coralline Algae (CCA) were found covering part of the rubble. As slow growing species, they normally cannot compete against macro algae or algal turfs. The fact that they occur in this environment is due to the inability of sessile species to colonize the rubble. Site LK-S had less rubble than LK-N but nonetheless substantially lower abundances of gorgonians and sponges. 12

13 Table 4. Soft flora and fauna on the transect lines. Species transects LK N LK S LK E LK W SR E SR W CR E CR W Erythropodium caribaeorum Plexaura homomalla Plexaura flexuosa Pseudoplexaura sp Eunicea sp Plexaurella sp Muricea sp Pseudopterogorgia americana Pseudopterogorgia acerosa Pseudopterogorgia bipinnata Pterogorgia sp Gorgonia ventalina Gorgonia mariae Amphimedon compressa Aplysina fulva Ircinia strobilina Ircinia felix Callyspongia vaginalis Iotrocha birotula Cinachyra sp Calyx podatypa Holopsamma helwigi Tedania ignis Strongilacidon sp Clathria sp Halisarca sp Mycale laevis Chondrilla nucula Raphidophlus juniperinus Cliona langae Xestospongia muta Eudistoma sp Clavelina puerto Ricensis Udotea sp Caulerpa sp Halimeda copiosa Palythoa grandis Millepora alcicornis red algae unident CCA Spirobranchus giganteus Rubble w algal turf Hardground w algal turf Sand

14 Statistical analysis of changes 1993 to 2002 Data for the leak site Modified table 2. location depth (m) total coral cover Montastraea annularis Montastraea cavernosa Agaricia agaricites Porites asteroides Siderastrea siderea Diploria strigosa Diploria clivosa Madracis decactis Dichocoenia stokesii Cardona Ridge ' t Cardona Ridge east Cardona Ridge west LKt1N LKt2E LKt3S LKt4W Outer Ridge ' Outer Ridge east Outer Ridge west Statistical comparisons between transects from the same site. These statistical tests were designed to establish the differences or similarities between neighboring transects located at the same site. The cover by species obtained from each quadrant was transformed to normalize the data using the arcsine of the species cover. Variability in the cover of coral species present was compared between the two east-west transects at the CR and SR sites and the four north-south, eastwest transects at the LK site to determine if significant differences were present (Table 5). The statistical analysis used to perform this test was a one-way factorial ANOVA (Analysis of Variance). Only three significant tests (at 95% significance level) were obtained, one per site. These results suggest that most coral species do not change in a significant way between adjacent transects, and that the differences in coral cover magnitude observed in the graphs are caused by natural variations of coral populations. Since the analysis reflects high similarities between adjacent transects, it is reasonable and safe to pool the data from the different transects at each site and use it together as a representation for the whole site. 14

15 Table 5. Coral Species Cover Comparisons WITHIN sites (one-way ANOVA). Coral Species CR east v. west SR east vs. west LK t1 vs. t2 vs. t3 vs. t4 Montastraea cavernosa not-significant test not-significant test not-significant test Agaricia agaricites not-significant test no-tsignificant test not-significant test Porites asteroides significant test not-significant test not-significant test Siderastrea siderea not-significant test not-significant test not-significant test Diploria strigosa not-significant test not-significant test not-significant test Diploria clivosa not-significant test significant test not-significant test Madracis decactis not-significant test not-significant test not-significant test Dichocoenia stokesii not-significant test not-significant test significant test The specific results (tables) of the ANOVA analysis are included in the Appendix. Statistical comparisons between sites. Coral species diversity was compared among all sites studied (CR, SR, and LK). For this comparison the Shannon-Weaver Diversity Index (H') and Evenness Index (J') were used. Diversity indices can be useful in the identification high diversity or low diversity areas. Comparisons between low and high diversity areas can help us to better define environmental factors that affect coral populations. The majority of diversity measures are generally aimed at species diversity and based on the principal of discretely countable units. Ecologists use the concept of diversity to characterize species abundance relationships in communities. (What is a community?) There are many ways of describing diversity. Essentially, it has two components: species richness, or the number of species, and evenness, or how abundance data are distributed among the species concerned. One problem with counting the number of species as a measure of diversity is that rare and common species are treated alike. Community 1 may have 50 individuals of species A and 50 individuals of species B, whereas community 2 may have 99 individuals of species A and 1 individual of species B. The first community is intuitively more diverse than the second, yet both have the same number of species. The Shanon-Wiener (also called Shannon-Weaver) index (H') includes both species number and evenness, where a greater number of species increases diversity, as does a more equitable distribution of individuals among species. For this reason, the Shannon-Weaver index (Shannon and Weaver 1949) is widely used for diversity studies. The number obtained varies from 0 for communities with only a single taxon to high values for communities with many taxa, (entropy). Where there is absolute diversity the Shannon-Weiner Diversity Index is equal to1.00. The index considers both the number of species and the distribution of individuals among species. For a given number of species, the largest value of H results when every individual belongs to a different species allowing in this way for a relative measure of diversity. The value of H' itself doesn't mean much, but when comparing H' between habitats, it measures the diversity of one habitat in comparison to another. 15

16 H is a more reliable measure as sampling size increases, so the addition of the calculation of evenness (J ) is often applied. Evenness (J ) is a measure of the similarity of different species. When there are similar proportions of all species then evenness is one, but when the distribution is very dissimilar (some rare and some common species), then the value decreases. In other words, J' can have a maximum of 1 (unity) but lower values indicate a less evenly distributed coral fauna. H' max is the maximum diversity possible on a given reef based on the total number of species observed, and would occur only if all species were represented by the same total number and size of individuals [H' max = natural log number of species ]. For this analysis, a modified form of the Shannon-Weaver diversity index, which uses number of species and cover (i.e. size) frequency data determined from photoquadrats (H'c) by the following equation: H'c= -SUM(Pi*lnPi) Pi= Ci/C = cover of corals belonging to the i th species/total cover The test measures the order (or disorder) observed within the studied system. The order is characterized by the number of individuals observed for each species. The evenness index (J') was calculated for H'c using H'max= ln (# species) by the equation: J'=H'/H' max Table 6. Shannon-Weaver diversity index (H c) for coral species in all sites Coral Species CR site SR site LK site Montastraea annularis Montastraea cavernosa Agaricia agaricites Porites asteroides Siderastrea siderea Diploria strigosa Diploria clivosa Madracis decactis Porites porites Dichocoenia stokesii H'c CR site SR site LK site Figure 12. Shannon-Weaver diversity index (H c) for coral species in all sites 16

17 Table 7. Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) comparing the Shannon-Weaver diversity index (H c) for coral species at all sites Source: Between groups Within groups Total DF: Sum Squares: Mean Square: F-test: p = Model II estimate of between component variance =.002 Comparison: Mean Diff.: Fisher PLSD: Scheffe F-test: Dunnett t: CR vs. SR CR vs. LK SR vs. LK Table 6 and Figure 12 show the Shannon-Weaver diversity index (H c) for the coral cover for the species present in the Ponce sites surveyed during October of H c in the Cardona Ridge (CR) site ranged from to ; from to in the Self Ridge (SR) site; and from to in the Leak (LK) site. Ranges of the Shannon-Weaver diversity index at the CR and SR sites show more similarities in coral cover order (lower index) relative to the LK site with higher disorder (higher index). Only three coral species were common to all three sites: Montastraea cavernosa, Siderastrea siderea, and Diploria clivosa. Montastraea cavernosa has similar H c in the CR and SR sites showing a higher index (coral cover disorder) relative to a lower index in the LK site (coral cover order). Shannon-Weaver diversity index for Siderastrea siderea varied from low at CR (coral cover order) to high at LK (disorder). The H c of Dpc is lowest at the CR site, indicating high order in the cover, and highest at the LK site indicating species cover disorder. The data show that not only the LK site has much fewer species of coral present than the other two sites (i.e. different coral species distribution), but also has a higher Shannon-Weaver diversity index, in most cases, relative to the other sites (coral cover disorder in the system). Regardless of the differences in H c between the CR, SR sites and the LK site the ANOVA analyses (Table 7) revealed a not-significant variance in the H c indices between the three sites at 95 % confidence. However, the probability obtained for the ANOVA test (p=.1924) is low indicating that the variance between the sites is high and very close to being significant (p=.05). The Dunnett t-test and Scheffe F-test (Table 7) also show the similarity between the CR, SR sites versus the LK site. Table 8. Evenness index (J ) for coral species in all sites Coral Species CR site SR site LK site Montastraea annularis Montastraea cavernosa Agaricia agaricites Porites asteroides Siderastrea siderea Diploria strigosa Diploria clivosa Madracis decactis Porites porites Dichocoenia stokesii

18 J' CR site SR site LK site Figure 13. Evenness index (J ) for coral species in all sites Table 9. Evenness index (J ) for coral species in all sites Source: Between groups Within groups Total DF: Sum Squares: Mean Square: F-test: p = Model II estimate of between component variance = 8.978E-5 Comparison: Mean Diff.: Fisher PLSD: Scheffe F-test: Dunnett t: CR vs. SR CR vs. LK SR vs. LK Table 8 and Figure 13 show the Evenness Index (J ) for the coral species present in the Ponce sites surveyed during October of Coral species J index in the CR site ranged from to ; from to in the SR site; and from to in the LK site. Large differences were not found in the range of Evenness indexes among the LK, CR, and SR sites. They are all low in the evenness distribution of coral fauna. However, differences were present when individual species are considered. Only three coral species were present t the three sites: Montastraea cavernosa, Siderastrea siderea, and Diploria clivosa. Montastraea cavernosa has a lower J index or less evenly distributed coral fauna t the LK site relative to the CR and SR sites. For Siderastrea siderea and Diploria clivosa, the Evenness Index is lower t CR and SR, relative to LK. These data suggest that the species have a more evenly distributed fauna than at the LK site. The J index supports the conclusions obtained from the H c index indicating similarities between CR and SR sites and differences between these two sites and the LK site. Regardless of the differences in J between the CR, SR sites and the LK site, the ANOVA analysis (Table 9) revealed a not-significant variance in the J indices among the three sites at 95 % confidence. However, the probability obtained for the ANOVA test (p=.3389) is low, indicating that the variance among the sites is high, and very close to being significant (p=.05). The Dunnett t-test and Scheffe F-test (Table 5) also show the similarities between the CR, SR sites vs. the LK site. The magnitude of the 18

19 variability in the evenness index for all the sites is lower (p=.3389) than the variability in H c between the sites, indicating more similarities in the evenness of the coral populations and less similarities in the coral cover. Statistical analysis of changes between 1993 and 2002 in the Cardona (CR) and Shelf Ridge (SR) Reefs Coral species Shannon-Weaver Diversity Statistics (H') and Evenness Indices (J') were compared for the Cardona Ridge and Outer Shelf Ridge sites for the years 1993 and 2002 to determine if significant changes have occurred in the populations of coral species present in these reefs during the last nine years. Positive or negative changes in the coral cover can give insights to changes in the environment that could have affected these coral populations. Table 10. Shannon-Weaver diversity index (H c) for coral species in CR and SR sites at 1993 and 2002 Coral Species CR 1993 CR 2002 SR 1993 SR 2002 Montastraea annularis Montastraea cavernosa Agaricia agaricites Porites asteroides Siderastrea siderea Diploria strigosa Diploria clivosa Madracis decactis Porites porites Dichocoenia stokesii CR 1993 H'c CR 2002 SR 1993 SR Figure 14. Shannon-Weaver diversity index (H c) for coral species in CR and SR sites at 1993 and

20 Table 11. ANOVA analysis of the Shannon-Weaver diversity index (H c) for coral species in the CR site between 1993 and 2002 Source: Between groups Within groups Total DF: Sum Squares: Mean Square: F-test: p = Model II estimate of between component variance = Comparison: Mean Diff.: Fisher PLSD: Scheffe F-test: Dunnett t: 1993 vs Changes were detected in the coral population and the H c index of the Cardona Ridge site from 1993 to 2002 (Table 10 and Figure 14). The Montastraea annularis and Porites porites species are not present in the transects measured during October, They also were not detected by visual inspection of the area, suggesting that they disappeared as part of the reef species composition at Cardona Ridge. The coral cover of Porites asteroides and Siderastrea siderea increased in disorder from 1993 to 2002 (higher H c index). Species that are known to be tolerant of adverse environments ( Diploria clivosa and Madracis decactis) were absent in 1992 but are present in The analysis of coral cover distribution suggests that the Cardona Ridge has been negatively affected since Regardless of these changes in species composition and H c index, the ANOVA analysis suggests that these changes are part of the normal variability of the reef system since the probability obtained for the variance test (Table 11) was reasonably high (p=.7206). In the case of the Outer Shelf Ridge, the changes in the coral cover do not seem to follow any trend (Table 10 and Figure 14). Coral cover disorder (H c) decreased for three of the species present (Montastraea annularis, Agaricia agaricites, and Siderastrea siderea) and increased for two of them (Montastraea cavernosa and Porites asteroides). These changes in cover order/disorder of specific corals are not related to the corals species documented tolerance to adverse conditions. Two new species were present in the 2002 surveys that were not detected in the area during the 1993 surveys (Diploria strigosa and Diploria clivosa). Overall the statistical analyses do not indicate positive or negative trends in the coral species populations and the changes seem to be caused by natural random reef variations. Table 12. ANOVA analysis of the of the Shannon-Weaver diversity index (H c) for coral species in the SR site between 1993 and 2002 Source: Between groups Within groups Total DF: Sum Squares: Mean Square: F-test: p = Model II estimate of between component variance =.001 Comparison: Mean Diff.: Fisher PLSD: Scheffe F-test: Dunnett t: 1993 vs This conclusion is supported by the ANOVA analysis of changes in H c between 1993 and The not-significant result (p=.2247) suggests that the changes between 1993 and 2002 are part of the normal changes in coral cover of a coral community. 20

21 Table 13. Evenness index (J ) for coral species in CR and SR sites at 1993 and 2002 Coral Species CR 1993 CR 2002 SR 1993 SR 2002 Montastraea annularis Montastraea cavernosa Agaricia agaricites Porites asteroides Siderastrea siderea Diploria strigosa Diploria clivosa Madracis decactis Porites porites Dichocoenia stokesii J' CR 1993 CR 2002 SR 1993 SR Figure 15. Evenness index (J ) for coral species in CR and SR sites at 1993 and 2002 Table 13 and Figure 15 show the Evenness Index (J ) for the coral species present in the CR and SR sites surveyed in January, 1993 versus October, Coral species J index in the CR site increased by different levels of magnitude for all species counted in the survey. This indicates an increase in the evenness of the coral cover by species during the last nine years and suggests as stabilization of the reef environment. Two species (Montastraea annularis and Porites porites) present in the 1993 survey were absent in These two species have been proven to be sensitive to adverse changes in the reef environment. Two species were present in the 2002 surveys but absent in 1993 (Diploria clivosa and Madracis decactis). These species are resistant to stress levels in the reef suggesting deterioration of the reef environment since Table 14. ANOVA analysis of the Evenness Index (J ) for coral species in the CR site between 1993 and 2002 Source: Between groups Within groups Total DF: Sum Squares: Mean Square: F-test: p = Model II estimate of between component variance = E-4 Comparison: Mean Diff.: Fisher PLSD: Scheffe F-test: Dunnett t: 1993 vs

22 The analysis on the variations in J index between 1993 and 2002 at the CR site (Table 14) indicates that the changes present are part of the normal variations of reef evenness in a coral population since the ANOVA test was not-significant (p=.5987). The changes in coral species evenness (Table 13 and Figure 15) at the Outer Shelf Ridge seem to be smaller in magnitude relative to the ones present at the Cardona Ridge. Most of the species show very similar J indexes between 1993 and 2002 with the exception of Porites asteroides that increased since 1993, suggesting a more even distribution for Porites asteroides. The ANOVA analysis (Table 15) resulted as not-significant, supporting this conclusion. However, the probability obtained in the analysis was low (p=.133), suggesting that the variability in evenness is high and close to being significant. Table 15 ANOVA analysis of the Evenness Index (J ) for coral species in the SR site between 1993 and 2002 Source: Between groups Within groups Total DF: Sum Squares: Mean Square: F-test: p = Model II estimate of between component variance =.001 Comparison: Mean Diff.: Fisher PLSD: Scheffe F-test: Dunnett t: 1993 vs Coral health analysis About 60 close-up photographs of coral were available. These were observed and analyzed for color, signs of bleaching, algal competition, and coral disease. Twenty-two of these photographs were selected from the three sites surveyed October 2002 to include in Plates 1 3. At least one of each species found on the hardground platform is included in the plates. At all three sites, the coral was relatively free of algal overgrowth. Perhaps 10 percent of the colonies showed some overgrowth and/or loss of surface area. Visual observations during the field program agreed with this. There was no apparent difference in the condition of the coral from the three different sites: Cardona Ridge, Leak Site, Outer Ridge. No coral bleaching was seen and no diseased corals were observed in October. Only one occurrence of the sponge Cliona was seen (Figure 17). The character of the coral in plates 1 3 is discussed in Table 16. Figure 17. Cliona has killed large areas of coral in the clear waters of La Parguera, Desecheo and Mona; but in turbid waters like Mayagüez and Ponce, it is very rare. 22

23 Table 16. Analysis of the coral health for the October 2000 sites Coral figure Algal overgrowth Color Colony loss comments Agaricia agaricites Color loss does not seem to be bleaching, cause undetermined. Algal overgrowth only at edges Agaricia agaricites Excellent condition Agaricia agaricites Excellent condition, algae at edges has not advanced Colpophyllia natans Remaining coral is in good condition, but progressive loss of colony, cause unknown Dichocoenia stokesii Diploria clivosa Remaining coral is in good condition, but progressive loss of colony, cause unknown Diploria strigosa Diploria labyrinthiformis Algae is covering part of the colony, coral has under saturated color Isophyllia sinuosa Madracis decactis This coral is often found in low light environments Meandrina meandrites Montastraea annularis Very little Montastraea annularis at these sites; usually the dominant coral on Caribbean reefs, but reduced drastically in high sediment influx environments Montastraea cavernosa This is the most common species at the sites Montastraea cavernosa Algal overgrowth at edges, color slightly under saturated Montastraea cavernosa Mycetophyllia Light areas may be fish bites Porites asteroides This species is very active in colonizing the survey sites and the rubble zone Porites asteroides Porites porites Siderastrea siderea Algal overgrowth extend over colony Siderastrea siderea Small colonies of this species are very common at all sites Siderastrea siderea Transect photographs from the 1993 surveys of Cardona Ridge and the Outer ridge were used to examine the health of corals in the area 10 years ago (Plate 4; Table 17). 23

24 Table 17. Analysis of the coral health for the 1993 survey sites 1 = very poor 5 = very good Coral figure Algal overgrowth Color Colony loss comments Agaricia agaricites Colpophyllia natans Excellent condition Colpophyllia natans Montastraea cavernosa Slight algal incursion from one edge Montastraea cavernosa Porites asteroides Color loss, may be bleaching Siderastrea siderea Coral in the present environment and in that of 1993 show no apparent difference in condition. Personal observation is that conditions are about the same as described by Acevedo, et al. (1989). The remaining coral on the platform seem to have made an adjustment to the sediment influx (Figure 18). Figure 18. Relation of coral cover to terrigenous sediment influx low cover at Baja Tasmanian, Cardona and Ratones reefs. 24

25 Discussion of the rubble zone at all sites At each site, the rubble zone was located so that we could position our transects. The rubble zone at the outer ridge and at Cardona ridge had large boulders (Figures 19, 20, 21 plate 5) and the pipe was partly exposed (Figure 22 plate 5). The rubble fill at the leak site was much smaller (gravel to cobble size) and uniformly spread (Figure 23 plate 5). Only the inspection chamber was exposed (Figure 24 plate 5). The leaks were seen within a couple of meters north and south of the chamber (Figure 25 plate 5). The most striking feature in the rubble zone was the high rate of coral recruitment (plate 6). The most common coral recruits were Porites asteroides and Siderastrea siderea, but Diploria clivosa, Agaricia agaricites and Montastraea cavernosa were also present. The boulder area had a heavy growth of new soft coral and gorgonians (Figure 26). Figure 26. Soft flora and fauna growth on the rubble boulders. 25

26 Conclusions The area of investigation is not a coral reef environment. Coral cover at all sites on the platform was less than four percent. Individual clumps of coral form knobs on the surface, but even these have low percentages of living coral (Figure 27). Figure 27. Outer Shelf Ridge. Knob on the hardground surface is covered with Palythoa. Results from the coral cover transects are very similar for the 1993 and 2002 surveys. Although the surveys were not conducted in the same locations (original surveys were in what is now the rubble zone), the transects in October 2002 are similar to the 1993 survey. Both the species present and the percent of cover are about the same at the Outer Ridge Site. At the Cardona Ridge, the species making up the cover are the same group, but total cover was 4% in 1993 and only 1.6% in This difference is probably caused by the patchy distribution of coral colonies on the hardground, and the clumping of the colonies that do occur. Only three significant tests (at 95% significance level) were obtained, one per site. These results suggest that most coral species do not change in a significant way between adjacent transects and that the differences in coral cover magnitude observed in the graphs are caused by natural variations of coral populations. No Montastraea annularis were present in the 2002 survey, but several colonies were seen near the transect lines. The other principal components of the cover, Montastraea cavernosa and Agaricia agaricites were encountered in less percentage in the 2002 surveys. Colonies of the three species were in good condition, showing no decline due to increased adverse conditions. Coral cover at the leak site was lower that on the two ridges. Two factors probably contributed to this: greater depth (13 m compared to 9 m) higher turbidity on bottom. Both Montastraea annularis and Agaricia agaricites were not encountered in the transects and were very rare in the near-transect area. Coral health conditions showed good color, no bleaching, very little algal overgrowth, no disease and low general Cliona incursion. Comparison of the 1993 and the 2002 photos of coral showed colonies in about the same general condition. 26

27 Juvenile recruitment is considered to be an important aspect of continuing survival of reef environments. Recruitment at the three sites seemed to be normal as compared to the better reef areas in Puerto Rico. Coral recruitment (Porites asteroides, Siderastrea siderea, Diploria) is good in the hardground, also good in the rubble zone, despite low coral cover. Effluent from the leak seems to be diffusing upward, with no appreciable effect on the coral or other flora and fauna. There has not been an increase in algal abundance like that seen at Mayagüez in the Sea Grant Reef Study. Secchi disk measurements were made on all three days. The values were meters at all sites. Bottom visibility was much less at the leak site than the two ridges. Wave action was suspending fine sediment present at this site, but not at the ridges. References 1. Acevedo, Roberto, Jack Morelock, and R. A. Olivieri Modification of coral reef zonation by terrigenous sediment stress. Palaios 4: Beach, David K "Sedimentation on the Western Island Caja de Muertos Insular Shelf, Puerto Rico." master's thesis, University of Puerto Rico RUM. 3. Beach, David K., and James V. A. Trumbull Marine Geologic Map of the Puerto Rico Insular Shelf, Isla Caja de Muertos Area, U.S. Geological Survey, Washington, D.C.. 4. Done, Terence J Constancy and change in some Great Barrier Reef coral communities: Amer. Zool. 32: Knowlton, Nancy, Ernesto Weil, Lee A. Weight, and Hector M. Guzman Sibling species in Montastraea annularis, coral bleaching, and the coral climate record. Science 255: Morelock, Jack Interpretation of coral reef cover and survey techniques. annual meeting American Assoc. Petroleum Geologists, Abstr. 7. Morelock, Jack, Wilson Ramirez, Andy Bruckner and Milton Carlo Status of coral reefs, southwest Puerto Rico. Caribbean Journal of Science, Online Special Publication 4: 57 p. 8. Shannon, C. E. and W. Weaver The mathematical theory of communication. University of Illinois Press, Urbana 9. Trias, Juan L Marine Geologic Map of the Puerto Rico Insular Shelf, Guanica to Ponce Area, U.S. Geological Survey, Washington, D.C Weinberg, Steven A comparison of coral reef survey methods. Bijdragen Tot De Dierkunde 51, no. 2: Appendices Coral transect photo sets 10 images each transect plus close-up photographs Coral colony and Flora and fauna photographs PDF version of report Video transects and general scenes with log Flora & Fauna counts Coral cover statistics Daily work logs 27

Differences in coral cover between high and low sediment influx areas in southwestern, Puerto Rico

Differences in coral cover between high and low sediment influx areas in southwestern, Puerto Rico Differences in coral cover between high and low sediment influx areas in southwestern, Puerto Rico Juan L. Torres, Jack Morelock Abstract High sediment influx is one of the major causes of the decrease

More information

III. Benthic Surveys at Conch Reef

III. Benthic Surveys at Conch Reef III. Benthic Surveys at Conch Reef Background Part of the focus of the 2010 benthic surveys in the upper Florida Keys region was to quantify the abundance, size, and condition of coral reef benthos along

More information

IV. Abundance of Adult and Juvenile Corals

IV. Abundance of Adult and Juvenile Corals IV. Abundance of Adult and Juvenile Corals Background The declines in abundance of two of the principal Caribbean reef-building corals, staghorn coral (Acropora cervicornis) and elkhorn coral (A. palmata)

More information

One-year Response of Florida Keys Patch Reef Communities to Translocation of Long-spined Sea Urchins (Diadema antillarum)

One-year Response of Florida Keys Patch Reef Communities to Translocation of Long-spined Sea Urchins (Diadema antillarum) One-year Response of Florida Keys Patch Reef Communities to Translocation of Long-spined Sea Urchins (Diadema antillarum) Mark Chiappone, Dione Swanson, and Steven Miller (Center for Marine Science Research

More information

Dynamics of Stony Coral Assemblages on Patch Reefs of the Upper Florida Reef Tract, Including Biscayne National Park

Dynamics of Stony Coral Assemblages on Patch Reefs of the Upper Florida Reef Tract, Including Biscayne National Park University of South Florida Scholar Commons Graduate Theses and Dissertations Graduate School 2011 Dynamics of Stony Coral Assemblages on Patch Reefs of the Upper Florida Reef Tract, Including Biscayne

More information

IV. Abundance, Size, and Condition of Scleractinian Corals

IV. Abundance, Size, and Condition of Scleractinian Corals IV. Abundance, Size, and Condition of Scleractinian Corals Background Benthic coral cover is a metric commonly used to measure the status and trends of coral reefs. However, cover is not a population metric.

More information

Remote Sensing of Episodic Rainfall Events Affecting Coral Reefs in Southwestern Puerto Rico

Remote Sensing of Episodic Rainfall Events Affecting Coral Reefs in Southwestern Puerto Rico Remote Sensing of Episodic Rainfall Events Affecting Coral Reefs in Southwestern Puerto Rico Y. Detrés, R. Armstrong, E. Otero and R. García yasmin@cacique.uprm.edu University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez

More information

Using IKONOS Images to Evaluate Coral Reefs in Low versus High Sedimentation Environments

Using IKONOS Images to Evaluate Coral Reefs in Low versus High Sedimentation Environments Using IKONOS Images to Evaluate Coral Reefs in Low versus High Sedimentation Environments David N. Cuevas Miranda Department of Marine Sciences, University of Puerto Rico at Mayagüez P.O. Box 908 Lajas,

More information

Earth / Environmental Science. Ch. 14 THE OCEAN FLOOR

Earth / Environmental Science. Ch. 14 THE OCEAN FLOOR Earth / Environmental Science Ch. 14 THE OCEAN FLOOR The Blue Planet Nearly 70% of the Earth s surface is covered by the global ocean It was not until the 1800s that the ocean became an important focus

More information

Florida Department of Environmental Protection Bob Martinez Center, Room Blair Stone Road, MS 3566 Tallahassee, Florida

Florida Department of Environmental Protection Bob Martinez Center, Room Blair Stone Road, MS 3566 Tallahassee, Florida Florida Department of Environmental Protection Bob Martinez Center, Room 608 2600 Blair Stone Road, MS 3566 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-2400 RICK SCOTT GOVERNOR CARLOS LOPEZ-CANTERA LT. GOVERNOR HERSCHEL

More information

III. Distribution and Abundance of Acropora Corals

III. Distribution and Abundance of Acropora Corals III. Distribution and Abundance of Acropora Corals Background The declines in abundance of two of the principal Caribbean reef-building corals, staghorn coral (Acropora cervicornis) and elkhorn coral (A.

More information

Shelf Reefs, Southwestern Puerto Rico

Shelf Reefs, Southwestern Puerto Rico Shelf Reefs, Southwestern Puerto Rico Jack Morelock, Nahum Schneidermann, and W. R. Bryant Abstract The insular shelf off Parguera, Puerto Rico, is 8 to 10 km wide. The shelf break at 20 m depth is a marginal

More information

MAINTENANCE DREDGE BENTHIC ASSESSMENT SUNSET POINT FARM LLC LONG POINT KEY MONROE COUNTY, FLORIDA. Prepared by:

MAINTENANCE DREDGE BENTHIC ASSESSMENT SUNSET POINT FARM LLC LONG POINT KEY MONROE COUNTY, FLORIDA. Prepared by: MAINTENANCE DREDGE BENTHIC ASSESSMENT SUNSET POINT FARM LLC LONG POINT KEY MONROE COUNTY, FLORIDA Prepared by: December 11, 2016 INTRODUCTION The owners of the Sunset Point Farms LLC, located on the northern

More information

The Marine Environment

The Marine Environment The Marine Environment SECTION 16.1 Shoreline Features In your textbook, read about erosional landforms, beaches, estuaries, longshore currents, and rip currents. For each statement below, write true or

More information

The Marine Environment

The Marine Environment The Marine Environment SECTION 16.1 Shoreline Features In your textbook, read about erosional landforms, beaches, estuaries, longshore currents, and rip currents. For each statement below, write or. 1.

More information

Southeast Florida Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project 2004 Year 2 Final Report June 2005

Southeast Florida Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project 2004 Year 2 Final Report June 2005 Southeast Florida Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project 2004 Year 2 Final Report June 2005 A report of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Fish & Wildlife Research Institute and

More information

III. Acropora coral habitat distribution

III. Acropora coral habitat distribution 2008 Quick Look Report: Miller et al. III. Acropora coral habitat distribution Background The declines in abundance of two of the principal Caribbean reef-building corals, staghorn coral (Acropora cervicornis)

More information

Caroline S. Rogers and Jeff Miller

Caroline S. Rogers and Jeff Miller BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE, 69(2): 459 470, 2001 CORAL BLEACHING, HURRICANE DAMAGE, AND BENTHIC COVER ON CORAL REEFS IN ST. JOHN, U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS: A COMPARISON OF SURVEYS WITH THE CHAIN TRANSECT METHOD

More information

14.2 Ocean Floor Features Mapping the Ocean Floor

14.2 Ocean Floor Features Mapping the Ocean Floor 14.2 Ocean Floor Features Mapping the Ocean Floor The ocean floor regions are the continental margins, the ocean basin floor, and the mid-ocean ridge. 14.2 Ocean Floor Features Continental Margins A continental

More information

COMPLEX ENVIRONMENTAL PATTERNS AND HOLOCENE SEA-LEVEL CHANGES CONTROLLING REEF HISTORIES ALONG NORTHEASTERN ST. CROIX, USVI

COMPLEX ENVIRONMENTAL PATTERNS AND HOLOCENE SEA-LEVEL CHANGES CONTROLLING REEF HISTORIES ALONG NORTHEASTERN ST. CROIX, USVI ATOLL RESEARCH BULLETIN NO. 556 COMPLEX ENVIRONMENTAL PATTERNS AND HOLOCENE SEA-LEVEL CHANGES CONTROLLING REEF HISTORIES ALONG NORTHEASTERN ST. CROIX, USVI BY IAN G. MACINTYRE, MARGUERITE A. TOSCANO, AND

More information

The Ocean Floor Chapter 14. Essentials of Geology, 8e. Stan Hatfield and Ken Pinzke Southwestern Illinois College

The Ocean Floor Chapter 14. Essentials of Geology, 8e. Stan Hatfield and Ken Pinzke Southwestern Illinois College The Ocean Floor Chapter 14 Essentials of Geology, 8e Stan Hatfield and Ken Pinzke Southwestern Illinois College The vast world ocean Earth is often referred to as the water planet 71% of Earth s surface

More information

The East of Nantucket Survey. Preliminary Results Presented by Eric Powell to the Habitat PDT on September 14, 2017

The East of Nantucket Survey. Preliminary Results Presented by Eric Powell to the Habitat PDT on September 14, 2017 The East of Nantucket Survey Preliminary Results Presented by Eric Powell to the Habitat PDT on September 14, 2017 Thanks Roger Mann who handled the logistics of the cruise Tom Dameron and others who provided

More information

Proceedings of the 6th International Coral Reef Symposium, Australia, 1988, Vol. 2

Proceedings of the 6th International Coral Reef Symposium, Australia, 1988, Vol. 2 Proceedings of the 6th International Coral Reef Symposium, Australia, 1988, Vol. 2 EFFECTS OF TERRIGENOUS SEDIRIENT INFLUX ON CORAL REEF ZONATION IN SOUTI-I\VESTERN PUERTO RICO Roberto Acevedo and.jack

More information

GEOLOGIC MAPS OF THE SOUTHWESTERN PUERTO RICO PARGUERA TO GUANICA INSULAR SHELF

GEOLOGIC MAPS OF THE SOUTHWESTERN PUERTO RICO PARGUERA TO GUANICA INSULAR SHELF GEOLOGIC MAPS OF THE SOUTHWESTERN PUERTO RICO PARGUERA TO GUANICA INSULAR SHELF Jack Morelock, Elizabeth A. Winget, and Carlos Goenaga Introduction These maps describe the sediments and sedimentary environment

More information

Relatively little hard substrate occurs naturally in the

Relatively little hard substrate occurs naturally in the CHAPTER FIVE Rock Habitats Relatively little hard substrate occurs naturally in the estuary, owing mainly to the vast quantities of fine sediment that have been deposited by the rivers. Rock habitat is

More information

Full file at

Full file at Essentials of Oceanography, 10e (Trujillo/Keller) Chapter 2 Plate Tectonics and the Ocean Floor Match the term with the appropriate phrase. You may use each answer once, more than once or not at all. A)

More information

Studying coral reef ecosystems with NASA tools in an age of climate change and coral bleaching: the role of spectroscopy

Studying coral reef ecosystems with NASA tools in an age of climate change and coral bleaching: the role of spectroscopy Studying coral reef ecosystems with NASA tools in an age of climate change and coral bleaching: the role of spectroscopy Juan L. Torres-Pérez, PhD, Liane S. Guild and Roy Armstrong Bay Area Environmental

More information

V. Density and Species Richness of Gorgonians and Cyphoma Snails

V. Density and Species Richness of Gorgonians and Cyphoma Snails V. Density and Species Richness of Gorgonians and Cyphoma Snails Background Gorgonians (Octocorallia, Alcyonaria) occur at their greatest diversity in the wider Caribbean, often exceeding reef-building

More information

Edwin A. Hernández-Delgado*

Edwin A. Hernández-Delgado* Long-term Coral Reef Ecological Change Monitoring Program of the Luis Peña Channel Marine Fishery Reserve, Culebra Island, Puerto Rico: I. Status of the coral reef epibenthic communities (1997-2002). Edwin

More information

Southeast Florida Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project 2005 Year 3 Final Report March 2006

Southeast Florida Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project 2005 Year 3 Final Report March 2006 Southeast Florida Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project 2005 Year 3 Final Report March 2006 A report of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Fish & Wildlife Research Institute

More information

Significant Ecological Marine Area Assessment Sheet

Significant Ecological Marine Area Assessment Sheet Significant Ecological arine Area Assessment Sheet Name: Eastern Bay of Island Biogenic Soft Sediment Complex Summary: The semi-sheltered areas between the central islands of the Eastern Bay of Islands

More information

Lecture Outlines PowerPoint. Chapter 13 Earth Science 11e Tarbuck/Lutgens

Lecture Outlines PowerPoint. Chapter 13 Earth Science 11e Tarbuck/Lutgens Lecture Outlines PowerPoint Chapter 13 Earth Science 11e Tarbuck/Lutgens 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors

More information

MARINE GEOLOGY & GEOGRAPHY

MARINE GEOLOGY & GEOGRAPHY MARINE GEOLOGY & GEOGRAPHY Bathymetry BATHYMETRY BATHYMETRY THE UNDERWATER EQUIVALENT TO TOPOGRAPHY THE STUDY OF WATER DEPTH A BATHYMETRIC MAP SHOWS FLOOR RELIEF OR TERRAIN AS CONTOUR LINES Bathymetry

More information

CORAL BIODIVERSITY AND ZONATION ON A PLEISTOCENE REEF, SOUTHEASTERN JAMAICA

CORAL BIODIVERSITY AND ZONATION ON A PLEISTOCENE REEF, SOUTHEASTERN JAMAICA CORAL BIODIVERSITY AND ZONATION ON A PLEISTOCENE REEF, SOUTHEASTERN JAMAICA Sherene A. James PhD Student - University of the West Indies, Mona Education Outreach Officer - Natural History Division, Institute

More information

This report is presented to: Nature Foundation St Maarten

This report is presented to: Nature Foundation St Maarten Coral reef monitoring in St Maarten 2016 and 2017 Impact of Hurricane Irma on St Maarten Reefs and on the Man of War Shoal Marine Protected Area - Global Coral Reef Monitoring Network - This report is

More information

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemünde (Germany)

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemünde (Germany) Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemünde (Germany) C r u i s e R e p o r t r/v "Poseidon" Cruise No. P 475 This report based on preliminary data and results Institut für Ostseeforschung Warnemünde

More information

IV. Distribution and Abundance of Acropora Corals

IV. Distribution and Abundance of Acropora Corals IV. Distribution and Abundance of Acropora Corals Background The declines in abundance of two of the principal Caribbean reef-building corals, staghorn coral (Acropora cervicornis) and elkhorn coral (A.

More information

BUREAU OF CLEAN WATER. Appendix C Biological Field Methods C1. Habitat Assessment DECEMBER 2013

BUREAU OF CLEAN WATER. Appendix C Biological Field Methods C1. Habitat Assessment DECEMBER 2013 BUREAU OF CLEAN WATER Appendix C Biological Field Methods C1. Assessment DECEMBER 2013 HABITAT ASSESSMENT The Department has adopted the habitat assessment methods outlined in EPA s Rapid Bioassessment

More information

Project 1.3.1: Improved knowledge of biota, habitats and risks. Project Leader: Dr Mick Haywood, CSIRO Division of Marine and Atmospheric Research

Project 1.3.1: Improved knowledge of biota, habitats and risks. Project Leader: Dr Mick Haywood, CSIRO Division of Marine and Atmospheric Research Marine and Tropical Sciences Research Facility (MTSRF) June 2007 Milestone Report Project 1.3.1: Improved knowledge of biota, habitats and risks Project Leader: Dr Mick Haywood, CSIRO Division of Marine

More information

Laboratory#6 Sediment Particle Size Distribution and Turbidity Flows

Laboratory#6 Sediment Particle Size Distribution and Turbidity Flows Laboratory#6 Sediment Particle Size Distribution and Turbidity Flows Although this laboratory will pertain to oceanic sediments similar processes can also be observed on land and other aquatic systems

More information

Southeast Florida Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project 2003 Year 1 Final Report 30 June 2004

Southeast Florida Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project 2003 Year 1 Final Report 30 June 2004 Southeast Florida Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project Year 1 Final Report 30 June 2004 A report of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Florida Marine Research Institute and

More information

Foundations of Earth Science, 6e Lutgens, Tarbuck, & Tasa

Foundations of Earth Science, 6e Lutgens, Tarbuck, & Tasa Foundations of Earth Science, 6e Lutgens, Tarbuck, & Tasa Oceans: The Last Frontier Foundations, 6e - Chapter 9 Stan Hatfield Southwestern Illinois College The vast world ocean Earth is often referred

More information

Mesophotic Benthic Habitats and Associated Reef Communities at Lang Bank, St. Croix, USVI

Mesophotic Benthic Habitats and Associated Reef Communities at Lang Bank, St. Croix, USVI FINAL REPORT Mesophotic Benthic Habitats and Associated Reef Communities at Lang Bank, St. Croix, USVI by: Jorge R. García-Sais, Stacey M. Williams, Jorge Sabater-Clavell, Rene Esteves, Milton Carlo P.

More information

MARINE GEOLOGY & GEOGRAPHY

MARINE GEOLOGY & GEOGRAPHY MARINE GEOLOGY MARINE GEOLOGY & GEOGRAPHY Marine Geology 4 LAYERS OF THE EARTH CRUST THICKNESS: VARIES BETWEEN OCEAN & CONTINENTS 5-40 KM STATE: SOLID ELEMENTS: SILICON, ALUMINUM, CALCIUM, SODIUM, POTASSIUM

More information

Spatial Patterns in Benthic Composition of Nearshore Seascapes and Implications for Scarid Populations and Fisheries in La Parguera, SW Puerto Rico

Spatial Patterns in Benthic Composition of Nearshore Seascapes and Implications for Scarid Populations and Fisheries in La Parguera, SW Puerto Rico Spatial Patterns in Benthic Composition of Nearshore Seascapes and Implications for Scarid Populations and Fisheries in La Parguera, SW Puerto Rico CHRISTOPHER F. G. JEFFREY 1,3, RANDY CLARK 2, and SARAH

More information

What Are Coral Reefs?

What Are Coral Reefs? ELA.08.CR.1.9.132 C1 T9 Sample Item Id: ELA.08.CR.1.9.132 Grade/Model: 08 / 1b Claim: 1: Students can read closely and analytically to comprehend a range of increasingly complex literary and informational

More information

C. STUDENT FIELD DATA SHEETS

C. STUDENT FIELD DATA SHEETS C. STUDENT FIELD DATA SHEETS Student Name Date Time Stream Location Parameter to find Your Group s Results Units trial trial average Transparency cm Water Temperature Air Temperature Weather N sunny N

More information

LAB 6: TRINIDAD BEACH FIELD TRIP

LAB 6: TRINIDAD BEACH FIELD TRIP OBJECTIVES: LAB 6: TRINIDAD BEACH FIELD TRIP 1) to develop your powers of observation, especially of geological phenomena; 2) to identify the rocks exposed at Trinidad Beach; 3) to reconstruct some of

More information

Habitat Assessment. Peggy Compton UW-Extension Water Action Volunteers Program Coordinator

Habitat Assessment. Peggy Compton UW-Extension Water Action Volunteers Program Coordinator Habitat Assessment Peggy Compton UW-Extension Water Action Volunteers Program Coordinator Adapted from a presentation by Jean Unmuth, Water Quality Biologist, WI DNR dnr.wi.gov www.uwex.edu erc.cals.wisc.edu

More information

Submersible investigation of unconfirmed western Miami Terrace habitat

Submersible investigation of unconfirmed western Miami Terrace habitat Submersible investigation of unconfirmed western Miami Terrace habitat Prepared By: Brian K. Walker, Ph.D. Nova Southeastern University Oceanographic Center 6/08/2015 On June 5, 2015 Nova Southeastern

More information

Directed Reading. Section: The Water Planet. surface is called the a. Earth s ocean. b. Pacific Ocean. c. salt-water ocean. d. global ocean.

Directed Reading. Section: The Water Planet. surface is called the a. Earth s ocean. b. Pacific Ocean. c. salt-water ocean. d. global ocean. Skills Worksheet Directed Reading Section: The Water Planet 1. The body of salt water covering nearly three-quarters of the Earth s surface is called the a. Earth s ocean. b. Pacific Ocean. c. salt-water

More information

THE DEPOSITS OF TSUNAMIS WESLEY PESANTEZ, CATHERINE NIELD, COLIN WINTER

THE DEPOSITS OF TSUNAMIS WESLEY PESANTEZ, CATHERINE NIELD, COLIN WINTER THE DEPOSITS OF TSUNAMIS WESLEY PESANTEZ, CATHERINE NIELD, COLIN WINTER AN OVERVIEW OF OUR SEMINAR WHAT IS A TSUNAMI WHY STUDY TSUNAMIS PROPERTIES OF TSUNAMIS TSUNAMI HYDRODYNAMICS IDEALIZED DEPOSITS SEDIMENT

More information

Southeast Florida Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project 2003 Year 1 Final Report

Southeast Florida Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project 2003 Year 1 Final Report Nova Southeastern University NSUWorks Marine & Environmental Sciences Faculty Reports Department of Marine and Environmental Sciences 6-30-2004 Southeast Florida Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project

More information

Influence of Macroalgal Cover on Coral Colony Growth Rates on Fringing Reefs of Discovery Bay, Jamaica: A Letter Report

Influence of Macroalgal Cover on Coral Colony Growth Rates on Fringing Reefs of Discovery Bay, Jamaica: A Letter Report The Open Marine Biology Journal, 28, 2, 1-6 1 Influence of Macroalgal Cover on Coral Colony Growth Rates on Fringing Reefs of Discovery Bay, Jamaica: A Letter Report M.J.C. Crabbe * Luton Institute for

More information

TASMANIAN SEAGRASS COMMUNITIES

TASMANIAN SEAGRASS COMMUNITIES TASMANIAN SEAGRASS COMMUNITIES by Christopher Grant Rees, B.Ed (}Ions.) Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirement for the degree of Master of Environmental Studies (By Coursework) Centre for Environmental

More information

Earth s Continents and Seafloors. GEOL100 Physical Geology Ray Rector - Instructor

Earth s Continents and Seafloors. GEOL100 Physical Geology Ray Rector - Instructor Earth s Continents and Seafloors GEOL100 Physical Geology Ray Rector - Instructor OCEAN BASINS and CONTINENTAL PLATFORMS Key Concepts I. Earth s rocky surface covered by of two types of crust Dense, thin,

More information

Chapter 2 Plate Tectonics and the Ocean Floor

Chapter 2 Plate Tectonics and the Ocean Floor Chapter 2 Plate Tectonics and the Ocean Floor Matching. Match the term or person with the appropriate phrase. You may use each answer once, more than once or not at all. 1. hydrothermal vents A. convergent

More information

June Recommendations by DEP and NMFS for monitoring impacts of the Miami Harbor Phase III Federal Channel Expansion (File No.

June Recommendations by DEP and NMFS for monitoring impacts of the Miami Harbor Phase III Federal Channel Expansion (File No. June 2016 Recommendations by DEP and NMFS for monitoring impacts of the Miami Harbor Phase III Federal Channel Expansion (File No. 0305721-001-BI) A. BACKGROUND Impacts due to sedimentation generated by

More information

Coral Reef Monitoring for Climate Change Impacts Jamaica

Coral Reef Monitoring for Climate Change Impacts Jamaica Mainstreaming Adaptation to Climate Change (MACC) Project Strengthening of the Climate and Coral Reef Monitoring Network Coral Reef Monitoring for Climate Change Impacts Jamaica 2001-2003 Discovery Bay

More information

Distribution and structure of the southernmost Caribbean coral reefs: Golfo de Urabá, Colombia*

Distribution and structure of the southernmost Caribbean coral reefs: Golfo de Urabá, Colombia* SCI. MAR., 64 (3): 327-336 SCIENTIA MARINA 2000 Distribution and structure of the southernmost Caribbean coral reefs: Golfo de Urabá, Colombia* JUAN M. DÍAZ 1, GUILLERMO DÍAZ-PULIDO 1, 2 and JUAN A. SÁNCHEZ

More information

Active Coastal Processes in the Lubec Embayment

Active Coastal Processes in the Lubec Embayment The Lubec Embayment Maine Geologic Facts and Localities August, 1998 Active Coastal Processes in the Lubec Embayment 44 49 50.51 N, 66 59 34.16 W Text by Joseph T. Kelley, Department of Agriculture, Conservation

More information

Lecture Outline Wednesday - Friday February 14-16, 2018

Lecture Outline Wednesday - Friday February 14-16, 2018 Lecture Outline Wednesday - Friday February 14-16, 2018 Quiz 2 scheduled for Friday Feb 23 (Interlude B, Chapters 6,7) Questions? Chapter 6 Pages of the Past: Sedimentary Rocks Key Points for today Be

More information

June 2018 Sediments and Dredging at GBR Ports

June 2018 Sediments and Dredging at GBR Ports June 2018 Sediments and Dredging at GBR Ports Reef 2050 Long Term Sustainability Plan The Great Barrier Reef is over 2000 km long and covers an area of approximately 350,000 square kilometres. It is a

More information

Sediment and sedimentary rocks Sediment

Sediment and sedimentary rocks Sediment Sediment and sedimentary rocks Sediment From sediments to sedimentary rocks (transportation, deposition, preservation and lithification) Types of sedimentary rocks (clastic, chemical and organic) Sedimentary

More information

Joint Federal Agency Submerged Aquatic Vegetation Survey Guidance for the New England Region Updated August 11, 2016

Joint Federal Agency Submerged Aquatic Vegetation Survey Guidance for the New England Region Updated August 11, 2016 Joint Federal Agency Submerged Aquatic Vegetation Survey Guidance for the New England Region Updated August 11, 2016 FOREWORD This guidance is the result of on-going interagency collaboration between the

More information

Ocean Floor. Continental Margins. Divided into 3 major regions. Continental Margins. Ocean Basins. Mid-Ocean Ridges. Include:

Ocean Floor. Continental Margins. Divided into 3 major regions. Continental Margins. Ocean Basins. Mid-Ocean Ridges. Include: Ocean Floor Divided into 3 major regions Continental Margins Ocean Basins Mid-Ocean Ridges Continental Margins Include: Continental Shelves Continental Slopes Continental Rise 1 Continental Shelves Part

More information

Marine Sediments EPSS15 Spring 2017 Lab 4

Marine Sediments EPSS15 Spring 2017 Lab 4 Marine Sediments EPSS15 Spring 2017 Lab 4 Why Sediments? Record of Earth s history - Tectonic plate movement - Past changes in climate - Ancient ocean circulation currents - Cataclysmic events 1 Classification

More information

http://www.neic.cr.usgs.gov/neis/pands/global.html Global Seismicity and World Cities This map displays the worldwide hazard to cities by large earthquakes. When earthquakes occur near cities, the potential

More information

Kamalo, Molokai 21 o N 156 o W

Kamalo, Molokai 21 o N 156 o W Kamalo, Molokai 21 o 02.496 N 156 o 53.837 W Management Status: Open access Area Description: Wide coastal plain with muddy sand beach shoreline. Residential area. Inner reef flat silty sand. Outer flat

More information

V. Urchin Abundance and Size

V. Urchin Abundance and Size V. Urchin Abundance and Size Background The 1983-84 Caribbean-wide mass mortality of the long-spined sea urchin Diadema antillarum represents one of the more spatially expansive and prolonged disturbances

More information

A Sedimentological and Granulometric Atlas of the Beach Sediments of Florida s Southwest Coast and Keys

A Sedimentological and Granulometric Atlas of the Beach Sediments of Florida s Southwest Coast and Keys A Sedimentological and Granulometric Atlas of the Beach Sediments of Florida s Southwest Coast and Keys Daniel C. Phelps, Michelle M. L. Ladle, and Adel A. Dabous The Florida Geological Survey Coastal

More information

Octocoral bleaching during unusual thermal stress

Octocoral bleaching during unusual thermal stress DOI 10.1007/s00338-009-0547-z NOTE Octocoral bleaching during unusual thermal stress C. Prada Æ E. Weil Æ P. M. Yoshioka Received: 6 March 2009 / Accepted: 5 September 2009 Ó Springer-Verlag 2009 Abstract

More information

ES120 Sedimentology/Stratigraphy

ES120 Sedimentology/Stratigraphy Midterm Exam 5/05/08 NAME: 1. List or describe 3 physical processes that contribute to the weathering of rocks (3pts). exfoliation frost wedging many others. roots, thermal expansion/contraction also credit

More information

Land subsidence due to groundwater withdrawal in Hanoi, Vietnam

Land subsidence due to groundwater withdrawal in Hanoi, Vietnam Land Subsidence (Proceedings of the Fifth International Symposium on Land Subsidence, The Hague, October 1995). 1AHS Publ. no. 234, 1995. 55 Land subsidence due to groundwater withdrawal in Hanoi, Vietnam

More information

Sediment Distribution and Characteristics

Sediment Distribution and Characteristics Sediment Distribution and Characteristics Sediments at the bottom of ponds are a source or sink for nutrients in relation to the water column, contribute to turbidity during storm events, serve as the

More information

Coastal Structures - Puerto Rico

Coastal Structures - Puerto Rico Coastal Structures - Puerto Rico J. Morelock and B. Taggart Physical Character Puerto Rico was formed early in the tectonic history of the Caribbean as the North American and South American plates separated

More information

Reading Material. See class website. Sediments, from Oceanography M.G. Gross, Prentice-Hall

Reading Material. See class website. Sediments, from Oceanography M.G. Gross, Prentice-Hall Reading Material See class website Sediments, from Oceanography M.G. Gross, Prentice-Hall Materials filling ocean basins Dissolved chemicals especially from rivers and mid-ocean ridges (volcanic eruptions)

More information

Geoduck Floating Nursery Monitoring Plan, Quarterly Reporting

Geoduck Floating Nursery Monitoring Plan, Quarterly Reporting December 23, 2014 Mason County Department of Community Development Attn: Grace Miller, Senior Planner 411 N. Fifth Street PO Box 279 Shelton, WA 98584 Re: Geoduck Floating Nursery Monitoring Plan, Quarterly

More information

Calculation of Stream Discharge Required to Move Bed Material

Calculation of Stream Discharge Required to Move Bed Material Calculation of Stream Discharge Required to Move Bed Material Objective: Students will map two sections of a stream and calculate the depth, velocity, and discharge of flows required to move the stream

More information

Redwood City Harbor, California, Navigation Improvement Feasibility Study. Appendix D. Geotechnical Engineering. DRAFT April 2015

Redwood City Harbor, California, Navigation Improvement Feasibility Study. Appendix D. Geotechnical Engineering. DRAFT April 2015 1 Redwood City Harbor, California, Navigation Improvement Feasibility Study Appendix D Geotechnical Engineering DRAFT April 2015 2 Contents 1 Purposes of Report... 3 2 Background... 3 3 References and

More information

Three decades of coral reef community dynamics in St. John, USVI: a contrast of scleractinians and octocorals

Three decades of coral reef community dynamics in St. John, USVI: a contrast of scleractinians and octocorals Three decades of coral reef community dynamics in St. John, USVI: a contrast of scleractinians and octocorals GEORGIOS TSOUNIS AND PETER J. EDMUNDS Department of Biology, California State University, 18111

More information

The Sea Floor. Chapter 2

The Sea Floor. Chapter 2 The Sea Floor Chapter 2 Geography of the Ocean Basins World ocean is the predominant feature on the Earth in total area Northern Hemisphere = 61% of the total area is ocean. Southern Hemisphere = about

More information

Marine Sediments. Introductory Oceanography. Ray Rector: Instructor

Marine Sediments. Introductory Oceanography. Ray Rector: Instructor Marine Sediments Introductory Oceanography Ray Rector: Instructor Ocean Basins are Vast Sinks for Huge Amounts of Sediment from Numerous Different Sources Four Major Types of Seafloor Sediments 1. Lithogenous

More information

Question: What is the primary reason for the great abundance of fish along the Peruvian coast?

Question: What is the primary reason for the great abundance of fish along the Peruvian coast? Buzzer Question # 1 Question Type: toss-up Question Format: Multiple Choice Category: Biology What is the primary reason for the great abundance of fish along the Peruvian coast? Answer W: upwelling Answer

More information

Brief report on Belize carbonate environments field trip Feb. 2012

Brief report on Belize carbonate environments field trip Feb. 2012 Brief report on Belize carbonate environments field trip Feb. 2012 In february 2012 I travelled to San Pedro (Ambergris Caye) Belize (Figure 1) to examine and study depositional environments of carbonate

More information

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF STREAM CONDITIONS AND HABITAT TYPES IN REACH 4, REACH 5 AND REACH 6.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF STREAM CONDITIONS AND HABITAT TYPES IN REACH 4, REACH 5 AND REACH 6. DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF STREAM CONDITIONS AND HABITAT TYPES IN REACH 4, REACH 5 AND REACH 6. The Eklutna River was divided into study reaches (figure 1) prior to this site visit. Prominent geologic or

More information

Many coral reefs throughout the Western Atlantic region

Many coral reefs throughout the Western Atlantic region Recovery of Diadema antillarum reduces macroalgal cover and increases abundance of juvenile corals on a Caribbean reef Peter J. Edmunds* and Robert C. Carpenter Department of Biology, California State

More information

The surface of the ocean floor is as varied as the land. The five major oceans, from largest to smallest, are

The surface of the ocean floor is as varied as the land. The five major oceans, from largest to smallest, are 11.1 Ocean Basins The surface of the ocean floor is as varied as the land. The five major oceans, from largest to smallest, are w the Pacific w the Atlantic w the Indian w the Southern w the Arctic The

More information

SATELLITE DATA COLLECTION BY THE UPRM-TCESS SPACE INFORMATION LABORATORY

SATELLITE DATA COLLECTION BY THE UPRM-TCESS SPACE INFORMATION LABORATORY SATELLITE DATA COLLECTION BY THE UPRM-TCESS SPACE INFORMATION LABORATORY Visita a la Estación De Satélites De UPRM En el CID 16 sep. 4:30 pm Nos reuniremos al frente del CID. CID L-BAND ANTENNA Orbview

More information

Document kindly provided by and reproduced with permission from

Document kindly provided by and reproduced with permission from Document kindly provided by and reproduced with permission from INTRODUCTION The aim of the substrate survey is to collect information on the percentage cover of the major benthic organisms and substrate

More information

BZ471, Steam Biology & Ecology Exam

BZ471, Steam Biology & Ecology Exam BZ471, Eam1, p.1 BZ471, Steam Biology & Ecology Eam Name Multiple choice When benthic organisms enter the water column with a regular diel periodicity: a) catastrophic drift b) behavioral drift c) constant

More information

Changes in Geomorphology and Backscatter Patterns in Mount Misery Shoal, Long Island Sound as Revealed through Multiple Multibeam Surveys

Changes in Geomorphology and Backscatter Patterns in Mount Misery Shoal, Long Island Sound as Revealed through Multiple Multibeam Surveys Changes in Geomorphology and Backscatter Patterns in Mount Misery Shoal, Long Island Sound as Revealed through Multiple Multibeam Surveys Laurie A. Zaleski Laurie.Zaleski@msrc.sunysb.edu, Roger D. Flood

More information

Kigoma Bay bathymetry, sediment distribution, and acoustic mapping

Kigoma Bay bathymetry, sediment distribution, and acoustic mapping Kigoma Bay bathymetry, sediment distribution, and acoustic mapping Student: Gwynneth Smith Mentor: Kiram Lezzar Introduction Echosounding is a method commonly employed for determining the bathymetry of

More information

Chapter 5. The Sedimentary Archives

Chapter 5. The Sedimentary Archives Chapter 5 The Sedimentary Archives Factors affecting Sedimentary Characteristics 1. Tectonic setting 2. Physical, chemical, and biological processes in the depositional environment 3. Method of sediment

More information

FORENSIC GEOLOGY SAND SIZE-DISTRIBUTIONS AS INDICATORS OF CRIME SCENE LOCATIONS

FORENSIC GEOLOGY SAND SIZE-DISTRIBUTIONS AS INDICATORS OF CRIME SCENE LOCATIONS I. Introduction 89.215 FORENSIC GEOLOGY SAND SIZE-DISTRIBUTIONS AS INDICATORS OF CRIME SCENE LOCATIONS If you think about the world around you sand, and other sediments, occur in many environments. For

More information

ARE YOU READY TO THINK? Look at the first slide THINK PAIR SHARE!

ARE YOU READY TO THINK? Look at the first slide THINK PAIR SHARE! ARE YOU READY TO THINK? Look at the first slide THINK PAIR SHARE! WHAT PROMINENT FEATURE CAN YOU IDENTIFY IN THIS PICTURE? What do you think the different colors represent? Who might find such a picture

More information

Oceanography is the scientific study of oceans Oceans make up over 70% of the Earth s surface

Oceanography is the scientific study of oceans Oceans make up over 70% of the Earth s surface Oceanography Oceanography is the scientific study of oceans Oceans make up over 70% of the Earth s surface An ocean must be large and have features which set it apart from other oceans (currents, water

More information

Freshwater Mussel Surveys in Mystic Lake and Middle Pond: (Barnstable, Massachusetts)

Freshwater Mussel Surveys in Mystic Lake and Middle Pond: (Barnstable, Massachusetts) REPORT Freshwater Mussel Surveys in Mystic Lake and Middle Pond: 2007-2017 (Barnstable, Massachusetts) prepared for Town of Barnstable 367 Main Street Hyannis, MA 02601 prepared by biodrawversity Biodrawversity

More information

Ocean Basins, Bathymetry and Sea Levels

Ocean Basins, Bathymetry and Sea Levels Ocean Basins, Bathymetry and Sea Levels Chapter 4 Please read chapter 5: sediments for next class and start chapter 6 on seawater for Thursday Basic concepts in Chapter 4 Bathymetry the measurement of

More information

Geology for Engineers Sediment Size Distribution, Sedimentary Environments, and Stream Transport

Geology for Engineers Sediment Size Distribution, Sedimentary Environments, and Stream Transport Name 89.325 Geology for Engineers Sediment Size Distribution, Sedimentary Environments, and Stream Transport I. Introduction The study of sediments is concerned with 1. the physical conditions of a sediment,

More information