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Reef Check Teams in Action -
Mexico - South Africa - Florida
Spotlight on Reef Check Site - Egypt
Trainings,
Workshops, and Meetings - WSSD -
ISRS - National Academy of Science - Coral Reef Task Force -
CWWA/CEF Conference - CEA Members Day - DEMA - Caribbean
Coral Reef Conference - Itmems II
Reef
Check Champions - UN
Awards
Methods Check - Rock vs. Dead
Coral
Other Reef Check News - RC
Philippines receives grant - RC training video update - Ocean
Nomads - Reef Check at Jean-Michel Cousteau Resort - Join Reef
Check - Send us your updates
Coral Reefs in the News - Coastal Sprawl - AMCA
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| Reef Check Teams in Action |
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MEXICO Since its start in 1997,
RC Mexico has flourished and is now being used by
local conservation projects, hotels and dive operations as a way to
educate local people and tourists about Mexico's coral reefs. Co-coordinators Françoise (Fafou) Houdebine and
Rosa Maria
Loreto Viruel have worked hard to include RC in
their own personal work and have been successful in joining RC with other
projects in the Yucatan Peninsula. Rosa is Coral Reef Program Coordinator at
Amigos de
Sian Ka'an where she uses RC to
monitor coral reefs within the Sian Ka’an Biosphere. Tourists are
encouraged to participate in RC at the Hotel Barcelo Maya where Fafou has
brought RC into diving activities at the hotel. RC Mexico is also working
with local dive operations, including Akumal Dive Adventures, a
dive center that has begun to integrate RC methods into its dive trips.
Akumal Dive Adventures is committed to
helping conserve Akumal’s coral reefs and will be making future RC
trips available. For more information contact Heather Froeming.
In May of
this year, the Regional Workshop of the International Coral Reef
Initiative (ICRI) for the Tropical Americas, was held in Cancun. Both Rosa
and Fafou participated in the event
and spoke about their involvement with RC. Given the excellent new system
of marine protected areas in Mexico, we looks forward to seeing RC being
used to demonstrate management success in these parks. For more
information about RC Mexico contact Rosa and Fafou.
SOUTH AFRICA
For
the last five years, RC South Africa has been led by Kevin Lee Payne through the South African Underwater Ecology Society
(SAUES). From the start, the link between RC and SAUES brought
together sport divers and marine scientists to research and protect coral
reefs. SAUES works with a number of local organizations, including Kwa Zulu Natal (KZN) Wildlife, to increase reef
awareness and promote conservation within South Africa. SAUES has also
launched an "Adopt a Coral Reef" program as a way of supporting their
ecological research and increasing public participation. SAUES was the
official RC representative at the World Summit
for Sustainable Development which was held in Johannesburg on
August 27 - Sept 4. A special thank you to all of the
volunteers who helped make this event so successful, especially Claire
Broom. For more information on RC South Africa contact Kevin.
FLORIDA Cry of the Water, a non-profit
organization dedicated to reef health, has been using Reef Check methods
for the past five years to survey reefs in Broward County, Florida.
Spearheading this effort are husband and wife team Dan and Stephanie Clark. Recently,
Cry of the Water, local volunteers, the National Marine Fisheries Service
and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission have been
working to prevent a local development to widen beaches along the Broward
County coastline. The project would deposit massive amounts of sand
leading to the destruction of fish habitat and increased silt,
sedimentation and turbidity to hundreds of acres of adjacent reef. By
using RC methods, Cry of the Water has been able assess the area’s
ecological significance and persuade developers to reduce the amount of
sand used in the project. Cry of the Water is continuing to bring their
concerns to state and federal agencies such as the Army Corps of Engineers
to work to minimize the impact of these beach nourishment projects on
their local coral reefs. For more information, visit Cry of the Water.
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| Spotlight on Reef Check
Site- Egypt |
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The
Red Sea spans a distance of over 1000 miles,
joining the Indian Ocean with the Mediterranean Sea and providing
exquisite coastline for eight countries. Comprised of mainly fringing
reefs, this region is known for its rich diversity and beautiful colors.
Divers from around the globe travel to the Red Sea to experience this
unique underwater world.
RC Egypt got off to a spectacular start in
1997 when Moshira Hassan and Gert Woerheide led over forty surveys
throughout the Egyptian Red Sea, involving more than 200 tourist
volunteers and 13 scientists from Australia, Germany, Egypt, Netherlands,
UK and Egypt. Since then, Moshira Hassan and Georg Heiss, co-coordinators
of RC Europe (Germany) have continued to coordinate RC in the Red
Sea.
2002 continues to be another
great year for RC Egypt. RC has been adopted as a standard survey protocol
by a number of local scientific groups. Dr. Mohammed Kotb, of the
University of Ismailia, has used RC to train rangers at the Egyptian
Environmental Affairs Agency and the Park Authority in Egypt. There are
plans to train students at the Suez Canal University in Ismailia and at
the American University in Cairo in RC methods. RC will be included in the
curriculum to engage students in field surveys.
In
June of this year, RC Egypt partnered with PERSGA (The Regional Organization for
the Conservation of the Environment for the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden)
to conduct an expedition of eight sites
in the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt. Reef Check
Europe and Sinai Divers
organized the trip which involved a core team of 5 enthusiastic volunteers
from Germany and England as well as a group of local volunteers. Two of
the volunteers were RC veterans, having participated as RC Egypt
volunteers in 1997 and 2001. This program was especially
significant because it was the first time that the whole Red Sea was
surveyed according to the same standard method giving a regional snapshot
of reef health.
The
expedition included revisiting many of the sites that were surveyed in
1997, 2000 and 2001 including Sharm el Sheikh and Ras Mohammed National
Park. The team also the surveyed reefs off Dahab, 80 km north of Sharm el
Sheikh, with a group of local volunteers. A Crown-of-thorns outbreak,
which has destroyed many of the reefs of the area, was observed first hand
by the team where several large dead Acropora tables recently
killed by the starfish were found in deeper waters.
Overall, the team was happy to
report that Southern Sinai reefs are in very good condition. It was noted,
however, that in areas where diving pressure and urban development were
high, reefs were visibly degraded. Where diving activities are regulated,
such as in the National Park, reefs were found to be in much better shape
where "no take” regulations and visitor education programs have been
established. RC Egypt would like to send a special thanks to Ghazala Hotel, photographer, Francisco José Cueto
Bercian and all of the volunteers who helped make this expedition a
success.
RC Europe, RC Egypt and Blue Heaven Holidays
have organized additional surveys in Masrsa Alam, Egypt, September
1-14. Look for an update on this trip in the next issue of The Transect
Line. For more information on how you can participate in future
expeditions, contact Moshira. |
| Trainings,
Workshops, and Meetings
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WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT August 26 - September 4, 2002.
Johannesburg Summit 2002 – the World Summit on Sustainable Development –
brought together 100,000 participants to focus the world's attention and
direct action toward improving people's lives and conserving natural
resources. Reef Check was an accredited participant in the Summit and
presented Reef Check's report entitled, The Global Coral Reef
Crisis: Trends and Solutions. For more information on the
results of this meeting click
here.
INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR
REEF STUDIES September 4 - 7, 2002, ISRS 2002 European
Meeting was held in Cambridge UK. RC Germany coordinator Georg Heiss and RC UK coordinator Alastair Harbourne represented
Reef Check at this event and presented RC's Five Year Report. For more
information click
here. Thanks to Kristian Teleki for lugging a box of reports from
South Africa to the meeting!
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF
SCIENCE RC was invited to attend an NAS meeting
in Washington DC on September 17, 2002 and helped to design a plan for a
special NAS report on the coral reef crisis.
CORAL REEF TASK
FORCE The United States Coral Reef Task Force
will meet October 2-3, 2002 in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The meeting is open
to the public and opportunity for public comment will be provided. For
additional information on agenda, location, etc. click here or contact Roger.B.Griffis.
CWWA/CEF CONFERENCE The 11th Annual CWWA
Conference, CWWA/CEF 2002: Partnering for the Environment, in conjunction
with the 1st Caribbean Environmental Forum & Exhibition
will be held in St. Lucia, October 7-11,
2002. For more information click
here.
CEA MEMBERS
DAY October 10-12, 2002 - Akumal, Mexico. Centro Ecologico Akumal
(CEA) is hosting their annual Members Day celebration. For more
information click
here.
DEMA October 22-25, 2002, DEMA (Diving Equipment and Marketing
Association) will hold their annual show in Las Vegas, Nevada. The DEMA Show is the world’s premier trade exhibition for
scuba diving, snorkeling, ocean sports, and adventure dive travel
products. For more information click
here.
CARIBBEAN CORAL REEF
CONFERENCE Reef Care and the NACRI (Netherlands Antilles Coral Reef
Initiative) are hosting the Caribbean Coral Reef Conference, which will
take place in Curaçao from the 24th to 29th of October 2002. For more
information contact DeeVon Quirolo
or click here.
ITMEMS,
PHILIPPINES November 25-28,
2002, the 2nd International Tropical Marine Ecosystems Management
Symposium II (ITMEMS-II) will be held in Manila. Stay tuned for more
details about the Reef Check post-symposium workshop. For more information
on ITMEMS, click
here. |
| Reef Check
Champions |
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This month we are highlighting those
RC representatives who were recently awarded grants from the United National Environment
Programme East Asian Seas Regional Co-ordinating Unit (UNEP
EAS/RCU). If you know a Reef Check Champion that you feel should be
highlighted, please email a brief description of their contribution as
well as a photo (if possible) to Kelly.
Andre
Uychiaoco - Marine
Science Institute, Univ. Philippines Collaborative Monitoring of
Priority Protected Coral Reefs in the Philippines
This project will bring the Biodiversity
Monitoring System of the Philippines’ National
Integrated Protected Areas System (NIPAS) into compatibility with more
mainstream GCRMN and Reef Check reef monitoring systems. The project will
organize and disseminate NIPAS coral reef data to provide easy access to
managers and trouble-free reporting to national (PhilReefs) and
international (ReefBase) databanks. NIPAS will integrate reef monitoring
and evaluation into a regular, multi-sectoral/participatory, and adaptive
management (decision-making) activity. This project will also provide the
opportunity to validate and upgrade the skills of NIPAS field
personnel and collaboratively monitor 3 high
priority NIPAS sites.
Nguyen Van
Long - Institute of
Oceanography, Viet Nam Coral reef
monitoring for sustainable uses of resources around the island groups in
the coastal waters of south-west Vietnam
While monitoring activities of coral reefs have been established
for seven sites since 1998, they do not cover an adequate area to provide
enough data and information for widespread coral reef management in
Vietnam. This project will focus on coral reef areas that do not have
established monitoring sites. This project will establish two new sites
for coral reef monitoring at Nam Du and Tho Chu islands as well as a
training workshop for local communities on coral reef monitoring at Phu
Quoc islands, Kien Giang province. The project will provide information on
the status of coral reefs in south-west waters of Vietnam (Gulf of
Thailand) and promote awareness in local communities on marine
conservation on a provincial level. The mechanisms to maintain long-term
monitoring of coral reefs will be in the framework of the project.
Abigail
Moore - Yayasan Adi
Citra Lestari (YACL) Indonesia Coral Reef
Survey & Monitoring for Management in Central Sulawesi,
Indonesia
YACL carried out a programme to train a local team in SCUBA and coral reef survey/monitoring
in 2001/2002 with major support from The David & Lucille
Packard Foundation, UNEP EAS/RCU and a contribution from PADI Project AWARE. This team now
has the equipment and skills to carry out coral reef surveys and
monitoring activities using Reef Check and Manta-Tow methodologies. YACL
will continue to increase the capacity of it’s survey team through the
further training of existing members and recruiting/training additional
members. The existing and additional capacity will be used to carry out
survey and monitoring activities at previous and new sites. The project
will give priority to survey sites where management programmes exist or
are in preparation, especially MPAs or proposed MPAs. In order to
demonstrate the usefulness of survey/monitoring data to communities and
decision-makers alike, YACL intends to implement a pilot project at the
Pulau Pasoso MPA site, for which YACL now has substantial data and
stakeholder support. For more information, contact Abigail.
Ketut Sarjana Putra,
Reef Check Indonesia and Wisnu Widjatmoko, Diponegoro University,
Indonesia Coral
Reef Monitoring and Coral
Campaign by Reef Check Program in Karimunjawa Marine National
Park
The Reef Check Karimunjawa 2002 program is part of the Reef Check
Indonesia program. This program focuses on reef monitoring in Karimunjawa
National Park by involving general public (volunteers), local community,
local government and NGOs. This program has three main activities:
Training of Trainers (ToT), Field Data Collection (monitoring), and a
Campaign and Socioecomic survey. This program will monitor coral reef
condition in Karimunjawa and carry out the information to be used by local
government and National Park Authority for creating decisions and
implementing rules and policy for the management of the Park. For
more information, contact Ketut. |
| Methods Check |
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WHY IS THERE NO OLD DEAD
CORAL CATEGORY IN RC?
Reef Check was designed for volunteers to
actively manage coral reefs rather then as an academic survey that a coral
reef ecologist or geologist would perform. Reef Check's goal is intended
to alert managers to take action based on survey results. Changing levels
of indicator organisms or substrate signify impacts of the reef (both
positive and negative) and overall reef health.
Reef Check combines non-living,
hard substrate into two categories: Recently Killed Coral (RKC) and
Rock (RC). The RKC category is only coral killed in the past
years, which is an important indicator of negative impacts. The RC
category includes true rock and coral that has been dead for over a year,
which can be distinguished from RKC in that it is usually covered
with algae and other encrusting material and has lost any skeleton
characterizations. Making the distinction between the two categories
allows managers to monitor how much coral is actually dying.
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| Other Reef Check News |
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RC PHILIPPINES RECEIVES
GRANT For the second year in a row,
RC Philippines has received a grant from the PADI Foundation to support
their efforts in establishing the Maribago Marine Park in Maribago, Mactan
Island, Cebu. Congratulations! For more information visit http://www.cebudive.com/.
RC
VIDEO Back at headquarters, the Reef
Check staff is hard at work on the forthcoming Reef Check Training Video.
The video was shot on August 15th and 16th by the
very talented UCLA film students Aaron Metchik and Amy Duninski. Expanding
on the Reef Check training manual, the video will go through,
step-by-step, a land-based training to aid RC trainers and volunteers. The
video will also present some field pointers and scenes of RC teams in
action from all over the world. Eventually, the video will be distributed
to all of our teams in a variety of languages. A very special thanks goes
to Lena Maun and Craig Shuman for all of their help and hard work on this
production. Look for the video in early 2003.
OCEAN
NOMAD In late August 2002 the
Ocean Nomad Expedition departed
from the UK, bound for the Middle East and Asia. Organizers Helen and
Richard Brian wanted to find a way in which they could make a meaningful
contribution to the conservation of the marine environment - and Reef
Check provided them with the perfect opportunity to do this. Both PADI
instructors, they aim to carry out RC surveys at as many different
locations as possible throughout the expedition, in countries such as
Jordan, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Oman, Iran and India. Helen
and Richard would like to thank Bauer, DAN Europe, Underwater Kinetics and
Hydotech. If you would like to learn more about the expedition, contact Helen.
REEF CHECK AT JEAN-MICHEL COUSTEAU RESORT
This year, a number of
resort personnel and guests at the Jean-Michel Cousteau Resort in
Savusavu, Fiji Islands were trained in Reef Check survey techniques in
hopes of establishing a permanent guest participation program. The team
spent three days training and carrying out surveys at a number of sites
including two that had been surveyed last year. Two permanent transects
were also established to aid in long term monitoring of the area. The team
was delighted to find many new hard coral colonies at all sites and also
found an interesting pattern in regards to invertebrate distribution. The
team noted that different fishing methods seem to be influencing the
numbers and types of invertebrates on local reefs.
Special thanks goes to RC Fiji
co-coordinator Helen Sykes,
L'Aventure Cousteau Divers, resort guest Hamilton Rowan (for his
enthusiasm!), and the Resort Marine Biologist Mike Greenfelder for
persistence in setting dates at a busy time. For information on
participating in future RC activities at the resort, contact Dive
Operations Manager Gary
Alford.
JOIN REEF
CHECK! Join Reef Check and help support of the
largest volunteer-driven coral reef monitoring program in the world! Click here to become a
member.
SEND US YOUR UPDATES! If you would like to submit a story or
photographs for the spring issue, please contact Kelly. To be highlighted in the next
edition of The Transect Line, all submissions must be received by November
15th, 2002.
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| Coral Reefs in the
News |
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COASTAL
SPRAWL In his report for the
independent Pew Oceans Commission, Dana Beach of the South Carolina
Coastal Conservation League details the effects of urban design and
land-use practices on aquatic ecosystems in the United States. Beach
presents new strategies and tools that communities may use to preserve the
same ecosystems that attract residents, tourists, and businesses to the
coasts. For the full report, click
here.
AMCA Access to Marine
Conservation for All (AMCA) International is a group of international like-minded scientists,
educationists and other interested individuals who share the commitment to
develop and promote a shared vision of enabling all persons, regardless of
physical ability, to participate in marine conservation. AMCA was founded
by Caroline Walsh to encourage people with physical constraints, such as
herself, to become involved in marine research. To become involved with AMCA contact Caroline.
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The global coral reef
education, monitoring and management program. >>
M a k e a D o n a t i o
n
<< |
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Reef
Check 1362 Hershey Hall, Box 951496 University of California at Los
Angeles Los Angeles, CA 90095-1496 USA 1-310-794-4985
(phone) 1-310-825-0758 (fax) Rcheck@UCLA.edu
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