[Coral-List] Coral Reef Conservation Preferences

Austin Bowden-Kerby abowdenkerby at gmail.com
Mon Oct 2 00:05:48 UTC 2023


Bula Steve,

What you believe is simply not our reality in the South Pacific Ocean,
where there are only three small and under-funded coral reef restoration
programs in all of this great vastness.  Other than in the US Pacific and
Australian waters, there is almost no funding for restoration, and the
entire emphasis is on MPAs, marine spatial management, and pollution
control measures.  All good, but the ironic thing is that this is despite
having less than three million people in the entire vast region, less than
the population of Puerto Rico, and thus our reefs are much less overfished
and have a tiny fraction of the pollution stress when compared to the
densely populated Caribbean and SW Atlantic.

The nation of Kiribati (pronounced Kiribas), has the most bleaching
impacted reefs on the planet, as measured by the number of months with
condition two and above bleaching events, with Kiritimati (Christmas) Atoll
reaching 26 DHW in 2015-16.
https://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov/product/vs/timeseries/polynesia.php#northern_line_islands
 The Florida Keys and central Bahamas have just gone through 22 DHW, and
this will be an extinction level event.  NOAAs condition two simply does
not express this severe level of intense bleaching.  As 4DHW starts
condition one bleaching, and 8DHW starts condition 2 bleaching, then
shouldn't 12 DHW be considered condition 3 bleaching?, and 16DHW be
considered level 4 bleaching? and 24 and above condition 5?  Conditions 4
and 5 are extinction level events, whereby entire species groups are
eliminated.  Using this expanded scale, from the online NOAA data,
Kiritimati (Christmas Atoll), is the only place on earth thus far to have
experienced a condition 5 level event, and the Florida Keys and Central
Bahamas have just experienced a condition 4 event, if we use this
terminology.

The totally un-fished, uninhabited coral reefs of the Line and Phoenix
groups have had a major collapse, 100% related to coral bleaching.  On the
few islands where corals have recovered, the original Acropora dominated
reefs are gone, with most Acropora and several other genera locally extinct
at ecological and reproductive levels, and several are extinct
biologically.  A low-diversity coral population dominated by plating
Montipora or submassive Porites rus now dominates on the few "recovered"
reefs.   Some researchers have loudly proclaimed recovery, and have
asserted this as evidence that coral reefs are resilient and adapting to
climate change, using coral cover as their primary metric.  But in my book,
this amounts to playing to the donors and the press, and unwittingly
serving the fossil fuel industries!  COME ON!  These reefs are vastly and
heavily impacted by climate change, they are ecologically and geologically
altered, and the local extinction of multiple coral species has been
covered up.   As long as we use coral cover as our primary metric, the
ongoing collapse of coral reefs will remain masked.  It is like we are
measuring plant cover as the metric for vegetative health, which will not
recognize a shift from forests to grasslands.  Collapse is occurring as a
series of phase shifts, and it is shocking that this has gone largely
unstudied and unnoticed, when it is staring us right in the face!

Our study on Kiritimati Atoll, the most intensely impacted coral reefs on
the planet can be found on Research Gate here:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/351946151_Restoration_and_Natural_Recovery_of_Corals_after_Unprecedented_Mass_Bleaching_and_Coral_Death_in_the_Line_Islands_Kiribati_March_2020_Version
  The study was condensed and published in the book: Active Coral
Restoration, edited by David Vaughn.

SPC, our South Pacific intergovernmental body for the environment, has
established an ocean acidification section, but from what I am witnessing,
coral reefs will be long gone by the time ocean acidification becomes an
issue.  We need a focus on bleaching and coral focused adaptation that is
just not happening.  And somehow the plot has been lost as to what is
actually happening on the front lines away from the highly resilient coral
reefs of Australia and Fiji.  These expansive reef systems have strong
thermal gradients conducive to the development of heat adapted corals, with
extensive upcurrent larval sources so that recovery is more rapid, and
therefore the experts of this region, who work on these highly resilient
reefs are celebrating resilience, and assuming that their reefs typify the
wider situation- which they don't.

In my opinion, when the tipping-point scale change in mean ocean
temperatures began last July, https://climatereanalyzer.org/clim/sst_daily/
the era of coral restoration is largely over, and the era of rescuing coral
genotypes and preventing coral species extinction has arrived.   Just like
we stop planting trees and carrying out reforestation during severe
droughts and in periods of extreme fire threat, changing strategies to
build firebreaks and create seed banks and gene banks and secure
reproductive populations, we must now change strategies with coral reefs.
I discuss this in my recent paper.  https://www.mdpi.com/2673-1924/4/1/2/pdf


On closing, only one island nation in our region has escaped these many
level 1 and 2 bleaching events, and that is Tuvalu.  With the most amazing
branching Acropora coral populations remaining (that I know of at least)
found on Funafuti, the main Atoll.  This includes km after km of diverse
3-meter high staghorn thickets, huge 3-5 meter wide single colonies of
Acropora florida and A. grandis, and other thick branched coral species
(which in other areas are under 1m wide).  Heat adapted populations of
these corals are located in warm shallow lagoons.  There are also very
large colonies of erect plate-like and knobby Heliopora, the blue corals,
and very large tabulate, digitate, and corymbose species.  Tuvalu has
perhaps the most intact example of an Acrpora climax community.  Located on
the fringe of cyclone activity, Tuvalu receives the cooling effects of
cyclones without the damage, and this structures the resulting community.
Massive coral species, for example, are not as common, having been
overtaken by the faster growing Acroporids.  As the Atoll has clean oceanic
waters, COTS are exceptionally rare.  But sady, after many lifetimes of
stability, these reefs are in their last few weeks of life, the massive
heat wave now in Kiribati, is heading their way, with severe condition 2
bleaching predicted to hit by December.  This is particularly sad as these
reefs have not been well studied!

We are planning an intervention for Tuvalu, in partnership with a local NGO
and Fisheries.  The shallow south Funafala lagoon has the most interesting
and largest coral colonies in <2m of water, which already experience
uncomfortable temperatures in summer, and with almost no coral bleaching or
mortality recorded. We are operating on the assumption that these hot
pocket reefs could reach temperature extremes of >36C in the coming months,
potentially 38C, like we saw for nearshore Florida waters in recent
months.  So we plan to sample as much of this biodiversity as possible, and
to move it out to a much cooler nursery site, in a well-sheltered sandy
area, located behind a small island situated between two deep reef passes
on the windward side of the atoll.  We are raising funds for this emergency
effort, and we also plan to film the coral rescue for presentation at
COP28, in partnership with the Coral Restoration Consortium group.  After
Tuvalu is secure then we will move to Vanuatu and Fiji with these same
strategies.

If self-funded helpers are interested please write, as you would be
welcome.  It would be amazing if an experienced film crew could record
these reefs properly before they are gone, and then return to record these
same transects at the height of the bleaching, and then the same sites post
bleaching.  Much like Chasing Coral did, but what was missing was the human
side and horrific impacts of coral reef collapse to reef-reliant indigenous
peoples and atoll nations.  To show the end result, all we need to do is to
go on a short plane ride to the adjacent nation, Kiribati, to show the dead
reefs and highly ciguatoxic reef fish dominating certain areas.  Also
missing from Chasing Corals was some hope- positive actions to save the
corals, which are a ray of hope in the darkness.   So this event might
potentially become a massive wake-up call.  Is there any way to create an
expanded SAVING CORALS film.

If interested in these approaches, please watch our 4 minute Reefs of Hope
Launching film.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LnJ-eUVJwqE
Plus the more detailed 20 minute film:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BG0lqKciXAA
Crowdfunding site:
https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/emergency-response-to-massive-coral-bleaching/
<https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/emergency-response-to-massive-coral-bleaching/>


We can not wait any longer!

Austin


Austin Bowden-Kerby, PhD
Corals for Conservation, Fiji


On Mon, Oct 2, 2023 at 2:01 AM International Coral Reef Observatory via
Coral-List <coral-list at coral.aoml.noaa.gov> wrote:

> Interesting analysis to note that contributions towards coral reef
> conservation tend to increase when major stressors are removed from the
> equation. Thus, effective coral reef management should be based on that
> priority when we identify Coral Reefs Optimism.
>
> However, current group thinking is leading international initiatives that
> exactly are just favouring restoration  projects over expanding marine
> protected areas and strengthening legislation to avoid further coral reef
> degradation. This last scenario is based on Coral Reefs Pessimism and it is
> not that effective for conservation.
>
>
>
> El martes, 26 de septiembre de 2023, Steve Mussman via Coral-List <
> coral-list at coral.aoml.noaa.gov> escribió:
>
> >
> > A Global Analysis of Coral Reef Conservation Preferences
> >
> > https://assets.researchsquare.com/files/rs-2350723/v1/2b8d20
> > cc-30df-4b4a-8384-0f4c4bb52e2b.pdf?c=1677092671
> >
> > This study’s findings should be of interest to everyone subscribing to
> > Coral List as many of authors’ conclusions would seem to challenge what
> > appear to be the guiding principles of many high profile coral reef
> > conservation projects in existence today.
> >
> > Some of the more interesting findings include:
> >
> > “. . . there is a task for scientists and media to more clearly convey
> the
> > true urgency of the coral reef crisis, because individuals respond more
> > actively if reefs are perceived to be in serious decline”.
> >
> > “We also found that conservation demand is highest in relatively
> > low-income countries. Residents of developing countries appear to
> > appreciate reefs for their non-use values to a larger extent than
> residents
> > of developed countries”.
> >
> > “. . . interpreting our findings in the context of loss aversion bias,
> > implies that losses weigh heavier than gains in decision making (Tversky
> > and Kahneman, 1991) and that conservation programs may highlight
> worst-case
> > future coral reef scenarios rather than the benefits of effective
> > management”.
> >
> > “. . . the pathway through which individuals prefer to contribute their
> > money towards conservation is arguably only effective if persistent
> > stressors, such as climate change and overfishing are removed. On
> > aggregate, individuals prefer hands on measures, like the funding of
> coral
> > and reef fish restoration projects, over more indirect measures where the
> > conservation benets are perhaps less immediately visible, such as
> expanding
> > marine protected areas and strengthening legislation. Coral reef
> > restoration of this kind is expensive, has varying success rates (Edwards
> > and Clark, 1999; Rinkevich, 2006), and is only feasible at small spatial
> > scales (Bongiorni et al., 2011). This non-alignment of public preferences
> > and effectiveness of conservation measure could potentially be addressed
> > through information and education campaigns that explain how protection
> and
> > legislation deliver conservation benefits”.
> >
> > I would argue that, to some extent, the coral science community may
> > actually be (unintentionally?) contributing to the non-alignment of
> public
> > preferences and effectiveness of conservation measures through their
> focus
> > on restoration in their current information and education campaigns. It
> is
> > also interesting to note that contributions towards coral reef
> conservation
> > tend to increase when major stressors are removed from the equation.
> >
> > Regards,
> >
> > Steve
> >
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