Publication: The natural recruitment and recovery process of corals at Green Island
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Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority
Abstract
The hard coral community at Green Island Reef is in the early stages of recovery following major damage caused from predation by Acanthaster between 1979 and 1981. Five years after the outbreak, in 1985, the coral community was dominated by juvenile corals mainly of the family
Acroporidae. Of 20 sites surveyed by line transect, only 5 had a hard coral cover greater than 10%. Some Pocillopora damicornis was apparently undamaged by A. planci, and some staghorn Acropora thickets were
regenerating from small parts of colonies which escaped predation.
There was no significant change in hard coral cover at any of 12 sites
resurveyed one year later in 1986. The absence of an increase in hard
coral cover over the one year period is probably partly due to the early
successional stage of the coral community, but it might also be partly
attributable to the effects of Cyclone Winifred which passed through the
area in February 1986.
Description
Keywords
Crown-of-thorns starfish - Queensland - Green Island, Corals - Queensland - Green Island, Acanthaster planci, Corals - Queensland - Great Barrier Reef
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Citation
Part of Series
Technical memorandum TM-15
Technical memorandum series
Technical memorandum series
