1 / 18

Reef Watch Community Education in Action

Reef Watch Community Education in Action. Dr Sue Murray-Jones Reef Watch - Liaison Officer and Technical Advisor (Office for Coast and Marine, DEH). PREMISE: Volunteers can do good science! - importance of temperate reefs - introduce Reef Watch - describe methodology - limits and challenges.

cachet
Download Presentation

Reef Watch Community Education in Action

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reef WatchCommunity Education in Action Dr Sue Murray-JonesReef Watch - Liaison Officer andTechnical Advisor(Office for Coast and Marine, DEH)

  2. PREMISE:Volunteers can do good science!- importance of temperate reefs- introduce Reef Watch - describe methodology- limits and challenges

  3. - rocky shores accessible- well studied- lots of books, kits, material- lots of community action

  4. Temperate reefs- subtidal less accessible- not as well studied- fewer books, kits, material- few community programs BUT- we know they are highly productive- key role in coastal processes- interest from divers- VERY expensive for researchers to work in subtidal

  5. The Unique South - very high biodiversity- extremely high endemism e.g. 85% of fish 95% of molluscs 90% of echinoderms (estimates from Poore 1991) 30% of Chlorophyta (green algae) 75% of Rhodophyta (red algae) 57% of Phaeophyta (brown) (Womersley 1991) - more species of algae than the GBR has corals

  6. Algal diversity

  7. Why is this so? - Current patterns - tropical influences - East Australian Current - Leeuwin Current - Antarctic influence- Isolation- Longest E-W temperate coastline

  8. Reef Watch- set up to monitor metro reefs- methodology and training developed- got community involvement, funding- raised awareness - events such as Marathon Dive- participate in Sea Week etc- ID workshops using scientific experts

  9. Surveys- visual fish census- quadrat counts- line intercept transects (LIT)- use of life form codes

  10. Life Form Codes

  11. Line Intercept Transects (LIT) - 1996 Adelaide University Botany Department - Reef Health Assessment - Development of LIT- use transect line, weighted ruler- record along transect using life form codes- simple- reproducible- directly comparable to U Adelaide/ EPA survey data

  12. LIT

  13. Successful program - >80 participants in marathon dives - c. 300 divers have participated - developed a solid data base - interactive web site - developing web engine to generate reports - has been copied by other states - held up as a model in election policy statements

  14. Limits - some data quality problems (addressing) - resourcing - commitment in winter! - data is semi-quantitative - need more spatial cover/replication - need more temporal replication

  15. Challenges - funding (always) - need to find a way to run w/o paid project officer - insurance!!! - need to extend to less “interesting” areas eg seagrass, degraded reefs, estuaries - time

  16. Keys to success - involvement of trained scientists at all levels, e.g. development, analysis, training, dives- high quality training and ID workshops- lots of information eg training manuals, kits- lifeform codes- progression of skills - basic fish census, quadrats - “graduate” to LIT- liasion with Government, SARDI, Unis

  17. Where to now? - expansion of programs - Feral and in Peril- “adopt a reef” program …. temporal repetition and ownership- devolving to local areas eg grants from Marion, Onka councils- expand to regions- add an intertidal component- Seagrass Watch- Blue Groper survey- fish biology workshop

  18. Acknowledgements- Coastcare & now Fishcare- active steering Committee, past, present and future- Jon Emmett, Sheralee Cox, Chris Ball- David Turner and Anthony Cheshire- SARDI- OCM

More Related