Lessons learned implementing mineral accretion and coral gardening at Agincourt Reef, Great Barrier Reef

Author:

Cook NathanORCID,Cook Kailash,Harris Kaitlyn J,Songcuan Al,Smith Adam KORCID

Abstract

SummaryThe health and diversity of coral reefs are critically important to the stability and value of the marine tourism industry. Declines in coral reef health through climate change impacts and cyclones, and associated media coverage, have impacted tourism visitation. In January 2018, a major change in Australian Government policy included a Reef Restoration and Adaptation Program to investigate the best science and technology options for helping the Great Barrier Reef recover and adapt to the changing environment. We report on a trial of two intervention methods, mineral accretion and coral gardening, to improve hard coral recovery at a popular site on the Great Barrier Reef. We installed six artificial reef substrates onto which an equal number of coral fragments of seven species were transplanted over the course of two years. During this time, three of the six treatments were connected to a low‐voltage power source to encourage mineral accretion and enhance coral growth. Electrolysis resulted in substantial mineral accretion on the steel substrate, however, the technology had no positive effect on the survival or growth of transplanted coral colonies. After 13 months, a second round of transplanted coral fragments was undertaken, and the electrolysis was discontinued. Over a four‐year period, mean live coral cover increased significantly in both treatment locations, from 1.7% and 0% to 80.8% and 75.8%, respectively. Control locations increased insignificantly from a mean of 5% to 14.2%. The mineral accretion technology proved technically challenging and did not support the growth or health of transplanted corals, providing no evidence to support the use of mineral accretion technology for this purpose. The technology may, however, have applications in the creation of new, solid substrates and for initial rubble stabilisation efforts. These results demonstrate the effective use of artificial substrates in conjunction with coral gardening techniques for the recovery of hard coral at degraded tourism sites.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference54 articles.

1. ARC Centre of Excellence. (2020)“Climate change triggers Great Barrier Reef bleaching” media release 7 April 2020. [Accessed 27 Jul 2022.] Available from:https://www.coralcoe.org.au/media‐releases/climate‐change‐triggers‐great‐barrier‐reef‐bleaching.

2. Australian Institute of Marine Science. (2021a)AIMS long‐term monitoring program. Annual summary report of coral reef condition 2020/2021; 19 July 2021.

3. Australian Institute of Marine Science. (2021b)Reef monitoring; July 2021 Agincourt Reef No.1. Long term Monitoring and Data Centre AIMS. [Accessed 31 Jul 2022.] Available from:https://apps.aims.gov.au/reef‐monitoring/reef/Agincourt%20Reef%20No.1/manta.

4. Australian Institute of Marine Science. (2023)AIMS long‐term monitoring program. Annual summary report of coral reef condition 2022/2023; 9 Aug 2023 Townsville Australia.

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