SettlementPlates: Difference between revisions
From coraldigest
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** Yields comparable data to natural reef substrata without damaging the reef | ** Yields comparable data to natural reef substrata without damaging the reef | ||
===Problems with Settlement Plates=== | ===Problems with Settlement Plates <ref name="Methods"/>=== | ||
* Typically use surfaces not found in the natural environment | * Typically use surfaces not found in the natural environment | ||
* Difficult to know where in the reef to place them. Drastic difference between plates only 5 meters apart | * Difficult to know where in the reef to place them. Drastic difference between plates only 5 meters apart |
Revision as of 10:28, 28 February 2013
Settlement Plates
What are settlement plates?
- Suitable strata for corals to settle and grow
- Devices used to determine health of coral reefs (more recruitment, more reef growth)
- Density and Recuitment
- Can be used to determine spawning events
- Locations
- Coral Reefs
- Horizontal
- Vertical
- Different depths
- Artificial reefs
- Reef balls
- Coral Reefs
- Types
- Ceramic tiles (finished, unfinished)
- best option
- gap habitat
- Petri Dishes
- Glass
- Dead branching coral
- Slices or blocks of stony coral
- Ceramic tiles (finished, unfinished)
What do settlement plates measure?
- Coral recruitment
- Health of coral reef
- Scientists don’t know much about the coral reproduction process
- Phi Phi Islands case study (recruitment after tsunami)
How are settlement plates used?
- Methods and different types of Settlement plates [1]
- Similar Depth
- Similar attachment mechanisms
- Wire mesh
- Steel bolts
- Place the settlement plates before a known spawning period or leave them there for a complete season cycle
- Label, bleach, dry
- Examine with a dissection microscope
- Why use Settlement Plates [2]
- Able to be removed from reef
- Yields comparable data to natural reef substrata without damaging the reef
Problems with Settlement Plates [1]
- Typically use surfaces not found in the natural environment
- Difficult to know where in the reef to place them. Drastic difference between plates only 5 meters apart
- Vertical and horizontal surfaces produce different results
- Expensive based on type of settlement plate
- Cannot directly compare different settlement plates
- Some have horizontal and vertical dimensions
- Difficult to manipulate under a microscope
- Destructive
- Using live coral as a recruitment measure
Examples of settlement plates being implemented
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Harriott, Vicki J., and David A. Fisk. "A comparison of settlement plate types for experiments on the recruitment of scleractinian corals." Marine Ecology Progress Series. 37. (1987): 201-208. Print.
- ↑ Salinas-de-Leon, Pelayo, et al. "Scleractinian Settlement Patterns to Natural Cleared Reef Substrata and Artificial Settlement Panels on an Indonesian Coral Reef." Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 93.1 (2011): 80-5. GeoRef. Web. 25 Feb. 2013.
- ↑ Green, Daniel H., Edmunds, Peter J.. "Spatio-temporal variability of coral recruitment on shallow reefs in St. John, US Virgin Islands." Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, Volume 397, Issue 2, 15 February 2011, Pages 220-229
- ↑ Phongsuwan, N., C. Richter, and Y. Sawall. "Coral recruitment and recovery after the 2004 Tsunami around the Phi Phi Islands (Krabi Province) and Phuket, Andaman Sea, Thailand." Helgoland Marine Research 64.4 (2010): 357+. Academic OneFile. Web. 25 Feb. 2013.
- ↑ Harriott, V. J., and D. A. Fisk. "Recruitment Patterns of Scleractinian Corals: A Study of Three Reefs." AUST.J.MAR.FRESHWAT.RES. 39.4 (1988): 409-16. Environmental Sciences and Pollution Management. Web. 25 Feb. 2013.