Metadata for Coral Reef Resilience Assessment for Puerto Rico

Description

Climate change threatens coral reefs through multiple pathways and interactions with local stressors. More resilient reefs have a higher likelihood of returning to a coral-dominated state following disturbance. To advance practical approaches to reef resilience assessments and aid resilience-based management of coral reefs, we conducted a resilience assessment for Puerto Rico’s coral reefs modified from methods used in other U.S. jurisdictions. We calculated relative resilience scores for 103 sites from an existing commonwealth-wide survey using eight resilience indicators and identified which indicators most drove resilience. We found that sites of very different relative resilience were generally highly intermixed, underscoring the importance and necessity of decision making and management at fine scales. In combination with information on levels of two localized stressors (fishing pressure and pollution exposure), we used the resilience indicators to assess which of seven potential management actions could be used at each site to maintain or improve resilience. Fishery management was the management action that applied to the most sites. Furthermore, we combined sites’ resilience scores with ocean warming predictions to assign sites to vulnerability categories. Island-wide or local managers can use the actions and vulnerability information as a starting point for resilience-based management of their reefs. This assessment differs from many previous ones because we tested how much information could be yielded by a “desktop” assessment using freely-available, existing data rather than from a customized, resilience-focused field survey. The available data still permitted analyses comparable to previous assessments, demonstrating that desktop resilience assessments can substitute for assessments with field components under some circumstances. This dataset is associated with the following publication: Gibbs, D., and J. West. Resilience assessment of Puerto Rico’s coral reefs to inform reef management. PLOS ONE. Public Library of Science, San Francisco, CA, USA, 14(11): e0224360, (2019).

Resources

Name Format Description Link
0 https://github.com/dagibbs22/Puerto_Rico_Resil_assmnt
53 S2%20table-%20resilience_assessment_data_20190413.xlsx https://pasteur.epa.gov/uploads/10.23719/1523059/S2%20table-%20resilience_assessment_data_20190413.xlsx
53 Raw_NRCMP2014_data_indicators_only_20171129.csv https://pasteur.epa.gov/uploads/10.23719/1523059/Raw_NRCMP2014_data_indicators_only_20171129.csv

Tags

  • climate-resilience
  • adaptation
  • puerto-rico
  • coral-reef-communities
  • natural-resource-management

Topics

Categories