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Biophysical assessment of reefs in Keppel Bay: a baseline study (April 2007)

dc.contributor.authorMaynard, J.A.*
dc.contributor.authorDavidson, J.*
dc.contributor.authorHarman, S.R.*
dc.contributor.authorMarshall, P.A.*
dc.contributor.authorCollier, C.*
dc.contributor.authorJohnson, J.E.*
dc.date.accessioned2012-05-25T01:18:30Zen
dc.date.available2012-05-25T01:18:30Zen
dc.date.copyright2007en
dc.date.issued2007en-US
dc.description.abstractThe Keppel Islands are a group of 16 continental islands lying 18 km off the coastal town of Yeppoon in the southern Great Barrier Reef. Located in the shallow basin to the north of Keppel Bay, the islands are host to a patchwork of fringing reefs in various forms of development. Coral communities are abundant in some locations, and coral cover is high (60 to 70%) relative to the average at sites surveyed by the Australian Institute of Marine Science’s Long-Term Monitoring Program (~35%), and are often dominated by extensive stands of branching Acropora that extend into shallow water. These ‘staghorn’ corals are vulnerable to impacts caused by environmental stresses such as elevated sea temperature (causing coral bleaching events), degraded water quality (associated with hyposaline floods events) and physical damage (from cyclones, storms and anchoring). The Fitzroy River, one of the largest catchments in Queensland, is about 40 km to the south of the Keppel Islands. Large flood plumes occur approximately every 10 years, and the soft riverine sediments are regularly re-suspended in the shallow bay by wind and tide action causing high turbidity. Heavy rainfall also affects the shallow reef flat habitats, with reported incidences of coral mortality caused by heavy rain at times of extreme low tidesen
dc.description.notesID: 1769en
dc.format.pages33en
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11017/203en
dc.keywordsB1.4en
dc.keywords2.1D.415.20.08en
dc.keywordsB1en
dc.keywordsCCAP 07/08en
dc.keywordsA1.4en
dc.keywordsRPMSen
dc.keywords2.1B.415.21.08en
dc.keywordsCCAP outputen
dc.keywordsA1en
dc.keywordsB1.3en
dc.keywordsBiodiversity-habitaten
dc.keywordstargeted scienceen
dc.keywordsclimate change action plan 1en
dc.keywordsKeppel Islanden
dc.keywordsresilient GBR ecosystemen
dc.keywordsclimate changeen
dc.keywordscoral reefsen
dc.keywordscoral coveren
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherGreat Barrier Reef Marine Park Authorityen
dc.publisher.placeTownsvilleen
dc.relation.connectiontogbrmpaGBRMPA published this itemen
dc.rightsCopyright Commonwealth of Australia. This work is copyright. Apart from any use as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, no part may be reproduced by any process without the prior written permission of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority.en
dc.subjectGreat Barrier Reef (Qld.)-Climatenull
dc.subject.apaisScientific researchen
dc.subject.apaisEnvironmental managementen
dc.subject.asfaClimatic changesen
dc.subject.asfaBiodiversityen
dc.subject.asfaCoral reefsen
dc.subject.asfaEnvironmental assessmenten
dc.subject.asfaNatural habitaten
dc.subject.categoryAnimalsen
dc.subject.categoryEcosystemsen
dc.subject.categoryClimate changeen
dc.subject.locationReef-wideen
dc.subject.themeEffects on the Reefen
dc.subject.themeReef Ecosystems and Speciesen
dc.titleBiophysical assessment of reefs in Keppel Bay: a baseline study (April 2007)en
dc.typeReporten
dspace.entity.typePublication

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