Seaweed biodiversity and temperature fluctuations of Calatagan Bay, Verde Island passage

Changes in seaweed biodiversity reflect ecological changes and management of coastal communities. Calatagan Bay is a tourism, agriculture and aquaculture hotspot fronting the Verde Island Passage, touted to be the global center of marine biodiversity. Detection of stressors through monitoring is the...

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Main Authors: Abeledo, Chona Camille V., Alvero, Ayra Patricia S., Erabo, Denis Dyvee R.
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Published: Animo Repository 2019
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/11118
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Institution: De La Salle University
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-101252023-10-19T06:30:30Z Seaweed biodiversity and temperature fluctuations of Calatagan Bay, Verde Island passage Abeledo, Chona Camille V. Alvero, Ayra Patricia S. Erabo, Denis Dyvee R. Changes in seaweed biodiversity reflect ecological changes and management of coastal communities. Calatagan Bay is a tourism, agriculture and aquaculture hotspot fronting the Verde Island Passage, touted to be the global center of marine biodiversity. Detection of stressors through monitoring is the key in the proper management of the area. This study surveyed existing seaweed species of the coast, and contrasted it with reported species in the area together with fluctuations in sea surface temperatures for the past two decades, contrasted with the local knowledge and perspectives of local coast-dwellers. Seaweed along the coast were collected from a representative area of 50 km2 with species identification based on morphology and pigment. Ten species that were previously unreported were found while fourteen previously reported species were no longer observed. Caulerpa, Kappaphycus and Sargassum, all with known market demands, were the dominant genera. Sea surface temperature data from local weather stations and the NOMADs database indicate significant warming events from June 1998 to present, with peak sea surface temperature at 31.9oC. Focused group discussions with local communities indicate increased incidences of ice-ice disease, and issues with the uncontrolled use of fertilizers of neighboring farms contaminating their coastal fronts. 2019-03-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/11118 info:doi/10.30564/jfs.v1i1.890 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Marine algae—Philippines—Calatagan Bay Marine biodiversity—Philippines—Calatagan Bay Water temperature—Philippines—Calatagan Bay Biology
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Marine algae—Philippines—Calatagan Bay
Marine biodiversity—Philippines—Calatagan Bay
Water temperature—Philippines—Calatagan Bay
Biology
spellingShingle Marine algae—Philippines—Calatagan Bay
Marine biodiversity—Philippines—Calatagan Bay
Water temperature—Philippines—Calatagan Bay
Biology
Abeledo, Chona Camille V.
Alvero, Ayra Patricia S.
Erabo, Denis Dyvee R.
Seaweed biodiversity and temperature fluctuations of Calatagan Bay, Verde Island passage
description Changes in seaweed biodiversity reflect ecological changes and management of coastal communities. Calatagan Bay is a tourism, agriculture and aquaculture hotspot fronting the Verde Island Passage, touted to be the global center of marine biodiversity. Detection of stressors through monitoring is the key in the proper management of the area. This study surveyed existing seaweed species of the coast, and contrasted it with reported species in the area together with fluctuations in sea surface temperatures for the past two decades, contrasted with the local knowledge and perspectives of local coast-dwellers. Seaweed along the coast were collected from a representative area of 50 km2 with species identification based on morphology and pigment. Ten species that were previously unreported were found while fourteen previously reported species were no longer observed. Caulerpa, Kappaphycus and Sargassum, all with known market demands, were the dominant genera. Sea surface temperature data from local weather stations and the NOMADs database indicate significant warming events from June 1998 to present, with peak sea surface temperature at 31.9oC. Focused group discussions with local communities indicate increased incidences of ice-ice disease, and issues with the uncontrolled use of fertilizers of neighboring farms contaminating their coastal fronts.
format text
author Abeledo, Chona Camille V.
Alvero, Ayra Patricia S.
Erabo, Denis Dyvee R.
author_facet Abeledo, Chona Camille V.
Alvero, Ayra Patricia S.
Erabo, Denis Dyvee R.
author_sort Abeledo, Chona Camille V.
title Seaweed biodiversity and temperature fluctuations of Calatagan Bay, Verde Island passage
title_short Seaweed biodiversity and temperature fluctuations of Calatagan Bay, Verde Island passage
title_full Seaweed biodiversity and temperature fluctuations of Calatagan Bay, Verde Island passage
title_fullStr Seaweed biodiversity and temperature fluctuations of Calatagan Bay, Verde Island passage
title_full_unstemmed Seaweed biodiversity and temperature fluctuations of Calatagan Bay, Verde Island passage
title_sort seaweed biodiversity and temperature fluctuations of calatagan bay, verde island passage
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2019
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/11118
_version_ 1781418221068353536