Is gardening corals of opportunity the appropriate response to reverse Philippine reef decline?

Hard coral cover (HCC) in the Philippines has been declining over the past decades. Restoration practices that utilize “gardening” corals of opportunity (COPs) are actively being adopted throughout the country. However, the use of COPs in coral gardening has not yet been examined in terms of its eff...

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Main Authors: Feliciano, Giannina Nicole R., Mostrales, Thea Philea I., Acosta, Ara Kim M., Luzon, Katrina S., Bangsal, John Christopher A., Licuanan, Wilfredo Roehl Y.
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Published: Animo Repository 2018
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3040
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Institution: De La Salle University
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-40392023-07-24T08:56:11Z Is gardening corals of opportunity the appropriate response to reverse Philippine reef decline? Feliciano, Giannina Nicole R. Mostrales, Thea Philea I. Acosta, Ara Kim M. Luzon, Katrina S. Bangsal, John Christopher A. Licuanan, Wilfredo Roehl Y. Hard coral cover (HCC) in the Philippines has been declining over the past decades. Restoration practices that utilize “gardening” corals of opportunity (COPs) are actively being adopted throughout the country. However, the use of COPs in coral gardening has not yet been examined in terms of its effectiveness in addressing nationwide-scale reef decline. The feasibility of using COPs for coral gardening was determined through a spreadsheet model that derives COP numbers needed to increase HCC in a reef. The model showed that 280,112 COPs of 5-cm radius need to be transplanted to increase HCC in a hectare of reef from 0% to 22%, the current national average. Annual COP mortality must be less than 31.5% to achieve an increase in HCC above 22% over a span of 10 years following a gardening effort. Actual counts and generic composition of available COPs were recorded from transects in 20 reef stations across three locations in the Philippines (Lian, Luzon; Lubang Island; and Balabac, Palawan). Natural COP densities suggest that large areas of healthy reefs must be searched to obtain enough COPs for an effective gardening effort. Furthermore, the COPs measured in Lian were below the recommended fragment size for transplantation, thus needing nursery rearing to attain the 5-cm radius prescribed for increased probability of transplant survivorship. These findings indicate that applying coral gardening at a nationwide scale is not likely to be feasible, effective, or sustainable. 2018-11-01T07:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3040 info:doi/10.1111/rec.12683 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Coral reef restoration--Philippines Coral declines--Philippines Coral reef management--Philippines 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 Coral reef restoration--Philippines
Coral declines--Philippines
Coral reef management--Philippines
Biology
spellingShingle Coral reef restoration--Philippines
Coral declines--Philippines
Coral reef management--Philippines
Biology
Feliciano, Giannina Nicole R.
Mostrales, Thea Philea I.
Acosta, Ara Kim M.
Luzon, Katrina S.
Bangsal, John Christopher A.
Licuanan, Wilfredo Roehl Y.
Is gardening corals of opportunity the appropriate response to reverse Philippine reef decline?
description Hard coral cover (HCC) in the Philippines has been declining over the past decades. Restoration practices that utilize “gardening” corals of opportunity (COPs) are actively being adopted throughout the country. However, the use of COPs in coral gardening has not yet been examined in terms of its effectiveness in addressing nationwide-scale reef decline. The feasibility of using COPs for coral gardening was determined through a spreadsheet model that derives COP numbers needed to increase HCC in a reef. The model showed that 280,112 COPs of 5-cm radius need to be transplanted to increase HCC in a hectare of reef from 0% to 22%, the current national average. Annual COP mortality must be less than 31.5% to achieve an increase in HCC above 22% over a span of 10 years following a gardening effort. Actual counts and generic composition of available COPs were recorded from transects in 20 reef stations across three locations in the Philippines (Lian, Luzon; Lubang Island; and Balabac, Palawan). Natural COP densities suggest that large areas of healthy reefs must be searched to obtain enough COPs for an effective gardening effort. Furthermore, the COPs measured in Lian were below the recommended fragment size for transplantation, thus needing nursery rearing to attain the 5-cm radius prescribed for increased probability of transplant survivorship. These findings indicate that applying coral gardening at a nationwide scale is not likely to be feasible, effective, or sustainable.
format text
author Feliciano, Giannina Nicole R.
Mostrales, Thea Philea I.
Acosta, Ara Kim M.
Luzon, Katrina S.
Bangsal, John Christopher A.
Licuanan, Wilfredo Roehl Y.
author_facet Feliciano, Giannina Nicole R.
Mostrales, Thea Philea I.
Acosta, Ara Kim M.
Luzon, Katrina S.
Bangsal, John Christopher A.
Licuanan, Wilfredo Roehl Y.
author_sort Feliciano, Giannina Nicole R.
title Is gardening corals of opportunity the appropriate response to reverse Philippine reef decline?
title_short Is gardening corals of opportunity the appropriate response to reverse Philippine reef decline?
title_full Is gardening corals of opportunity the appropriate response to reverse Philippine reef decline?
title_fullStr Is gardening corals of opportunity the appropriate response to reverse Philippine reef decline?
title_full_unstemmed Is gardening corals of opportunity the appropriate response to reverse Philippine reef decline?
title_sort is gardening corals of opportunity the appropriate response to reverse philippine reef decline?
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2018
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3040
_version_ 1772836059475869696