Using reefcheck monitoring database to develop the coral reef index of biological integrity

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Using reefcheck monitoring database to develop the coral reef index of biological integrity. / Nguyen, Hai Yen T.; Pedersen, Ole; Ikejima, Kou; Sunada, Kongo; Oishi, Satoru.

In: Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science, Vol. 4, No. 2, 2009, p. 90-102.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Nguyen, HYT, Pedersen, O, Ikejima, K, Sunada, K & Oishi, S 2009, 'Using reefcheck monitoring database to develop the coral reef index of biological integrity', Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 90-102. https://doi.org/10.3923/jfas.2009.90.102

APA

Nguyen, H. Y. T., Pedersen, O., Ikejima, K., Sunada, K., & Oishi, S. (2009). Using reefcheck monitoring database to develop the coral reef index of biological integrity. Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science, 4(2), 90-102. https://doi.org/10.3923/jfas.2009.90.102

Vancouver

Nguyen HYT, Pedersen O, Ikejima K, Sunada K, Oishi S. Using reefcheck monitoring database to develop the coral reef index of biological integrity. Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science. 2009;4(2):90-102. https://doi.org/10.3923/jfas.2009.90.102

Author

Nguyen, Hai Yen T. ; Pedersen, Ole ; Ikejima, Kou ; Sunada, Kongo ; Oishi, Satoru. / Using reefcheck monitoring database to develop the coral reef index of biological integrity. In: Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science. 2009 ; Vol. 4, No. 2. pp. 90-102.

Bibtex

@article{a8574f57a9d0488a9cd656d050fb089a,
title = "Using reefcheck monitoring database to develop the coral reef index of biological integrity",
abstract = "The coral reef indices of biological integrity was constituted based on the reef check monitoring data. Seventy six minimally disturbed sites and 72 maximallv disturbed sites in shallow water and 39 minimally disturbed sites and 37 maximally disturbed sites in deep water were classified based on the high-end and low-end percentages and ratios of hard coral, dead coral and fieshy algae. A total of 52 candidate metrics was identified and compiled, Eight and four metrics were finally selected to constitute the shallow and deep water coral reef indices respectively. The rating curve was applied for each metric to identify two lower a and upper b threshold values. A set of scores 1.3 and 5 was used to score and narrate individual metric values. Each metric value at a site presented a poor. moderated or good condition of reefs. The index was calculated by averaging all selected metric scores. The overall site classification efficiencies were of 65.97 and 66,13% for shallow and deep waters respectively. Importantly, the strong negative correlation between indices and dynamite fishing -0.286 (p<0.01) and number of yacht within 1 km -0.185 (p<0.05) in shallow water and with poison fishing -0.279(p<0.05) and coral damaged by other factors -0.283 (p<0.05) in deep water indicated that coral reef indices were sensitive responses to stressors and can be capable to use as the coral reef biological monitoring tool.",
keywords = "Attribute, Bioindicator, Coral reef, Index of biological integrity, Maximally disturbed sites, Metric, Minimally",
author = "Nguyen, {Hai Yen T.} and Ole Pedersen and Kou Ikejima and Kongo Sunada and Satoru Oishi",
year = "2009",
doi = "10.3923/jfas.2009.90.102",
language = "English",
volume = "4",
pages = "90--102",
journal = "Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science",
issn = "1816-4927",
publisher = "Academic Journals Inc",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Using reefcheck monitoring database to develop the coral reef index of biological integrity

AU - Nguyen, Hai Yen T.

AU - Pedersen, Ole

AU - Ikejima, Kou

AU - Sunada, Kongo

AU - Oishi, Satoru

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - The coral reef indices of biological integrity was constituted based on the reef check monitoring data. Seventy six minimally disturbed sites and 72 maximallv disturbed sites in shallow water and 39 minimally disturbed sites and 37 maximally disturbed sites in deep water were classified based on the high-end and low-end percentages and ratios of hard coral, dead coral and fieshy algae. A total of 52 candidate metrics was identified and compiled, Eight and four metrics were finally selected to constitute the shallow and deep water coral reef indices respectively. The rating curve was applied for each metric to identify two lower a and upper b threshold values. A set of scores 1.3 and 5 was used to score and narrate individual metric values. Each metric value at a site presented a poor. moderated or good condition of reefs. The index was calculated by averaging all selected metric scores. The overall site classification efficiencies were of 65.97 and 66,13% for shallow and deep waters respectively. Importantly, the strong negative correlation between indices and dynamite fishing -0.286 (p<0.01) and number of yacht within 1 km -0.185 (p<0.05) in shallow water and with poison fishing -0.279(p<0.05) and coral damaged by other factors -0.283 (p<0.05) in deep water indicated that coral reef indices were sensitive responses to stressors and can be capable to use as the coral reef biological monitoring tool.

AB - The coral reef indices of biological integrity was constituted based on the reef check monitoring data. Seventy six minimally disturbed sites and 72 maximallv disturbed sites in shallow water and 39 minimally disturbed sites and 37 maximally disturbed sites in deep water were classified based on the high-end and low-end percentages and ratios of hard coral, dead coral and fieshy algae. A total of 52 candidate metrics was identified and compiled, Eight and four metrics were finally selected to constitute the shallow and deep water coral reef indices respectively. The rating curve was applied for each metric to identify two lower a and upper b threshold values. A set of scores 1.3 and 5 was used to score and narrate individual metric values. Each metric value at a site presented a poor. moderated or good condition of reefs. The index was calculated by averaging all selected metric scores. The overall site classification efficiencies were of 65.97 and 66,13% for shallow and deep waters respectively. Importantly, the strong negative correlation between indices and dynamite fishing -0.286 (p<0.01) and number of yacht within 1 km -0.185 (p<0.05) in shallow water and with poison fishing -0.279(p<0.05) and coral damaged by other factors -0.283 (p<0.05) in deep water indicated that coral reef indices were sensitive responses to stressors and can be capable to use as the coral reef biological monitoring tool.

KW - Attribute

KW - Bioindicator

KW - Coral reef

KW - Index of biological integrity

KW - Maximally disturbed sites

KW - Metric

KW - Minimally

U2 - 10.3923/jfas.2009.90.102

DO - 10.3923/jfas.2009.90.102

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:67449152695

VL - 4

SP - 90

EP - 102

JO - Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science

JF - Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science

SN - 1816-4927

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 197690875