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Atlantic and Gulf Rapid Reef Assessment (AGRRA) Belt Transect Survey. (Advanced/Level 3) Training. By Julie Galkiewicz SNI - Tarpon Springs. What did we survey with the Basic level?. Coral species Sizes. What we’re adding!. Disease types % mortality and classifications Bleaching
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Atlantic and Gulf Rapid Reef Assessment (AGRRA)Belt Transect Survey (Advanced/Level 3) Training By Julie Galkiewicz SNI - Tarpon Springs
What did we survey with the Basic level? • Coral species • Sizes
What we’re adding! • Disease types • % mortality and classifications • Bleaching • Clumps, Fragments, Isolates
Diseases • Colored Band Diseases • Black Band Disease (BBD) • White Diseases or Syndromes • ACER and APAL only: White Band (WB) or White Patch Disease (WPD) • All other corals: White Plague (WP) • Tissue discoloration • Dark Spots Syndrome (DS) • Yellow Band (YB) • Tissue Anomalies
Diseases: Colored Band Diseases • Black Band Disease (BBD)
White Diseases or Syndromes For APAL and ACER only White Patch Disease (WPD) White Band (WB)
White Diseases or Syndromes All the rest of the corals: White Plague (WP)
Tissue Discoloration Dark Spot (DS) Yellow Band (YB)
Disease? • Parrotfish bites! • Destroys skeleton structure • No tissue left behind • Other diseases don’t erode the skeleton
Tissue anomalies • Tumors • Large polyps or ridges compared to the rest of the coral • Same coral tissue
Mortality • Newly dead (ND) • Transitional Mortality (TM) • Old Mortality (OM) • Standing Dead (SD)
New Mortality (NM) • Bright white skeleton • No algal cover • Transitional Mortality (TM) • Skeleton still intact • Some turf algae or biofilm growth
Old Mortality (OM) • Algae, sponges, other corals covering the dead part • Skeleton eroding away
Standing Dead (SD) • No living coral tissue on the skeleton • Skeleton structure eroded away
Percent Mortality Estimate the percent of living (colored) tissue A B C
Bleaching • Bleaching (BL) • Polyps still living, skeleton not bare • Pale (P) SSID
Clumps, Fragments, and Isolates (Oh my!) Clumps • A group of the same species of coral that are overlapping. Can’t see individual colony borders.
Clumps, Fragments, and Isolates (Oh my!) Fragments • Detached, broken, and easily moved coral that is unlikely to remain for long in its current position on the reef
Clumps, Fragments, and Isolates (Oh my!) Isolates • Isolated patches of coral tissue on a large boulder coral • Separated by dead skeleton • Caused by disease, bleaching killing off part of the coral