Coral Reefs: 1999
Publications
Author:
Seymour, R.M. and Bradbury, R.H.
Title: Lengthening reef recovery times from
crown-of-thorns outbreaks signal systemic degradation of the Great
Barrier Reef.
Publication: Marine Ecology Progress Series
176: 1-10, 1999.
© Inter-Research
Notes:
Repeated outbreaks of crown-of-thorns starfish Acanthaster
planci have been observed on the Great Barrier Reef (GBR)
since the mid 1960s. Several authors have conjectured that
long-term degradation of reef community structure is a possible
consequence of such repeated outbreaks. In this paper we use the
data from the Australian Institute of Marine Science's (AIMS)
annual synoptic surveys (1985 to 1996) of the whole GBR as a
statistical database with which to investigate this question. We
use a simple mathematical model of transition between 3 reefs
states - AO (active outbreak in progress), RE (recovering from
recent outbreak), and NO (no evidence of a recent outbreak) -
which we show is adequate to track the large-scale data over time.
A more refined analysis, using Bayesian statistical methods, is
then employed to generate a (posterior) probability distribution
for a key model parameter, beta, which represents the potential
for non-stationary, temporal variation in the rate of recovery of
reefs from outbreaks. If beta = 0, the rate of recovery is
constant, if beta < 0, the rate of recovery increases with
time, and if beta > 0, the rate of recovery decreases with
time. We conclude from this distribution that there is a clear
signal showing that the average reef recovery time is lengthening
over the period for which data is available, i.e. beta > 0. We
interpret this signal as evidence that it is harder for reefs to
recover from outbreaks in later years than in earlier years, other
things being equal, indicating that key features of reef community
structure have been damaged over time.
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