2000-2002 Rapid Ecological Assessment of Corals (Anthozoa) on Shallow Reefs of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. Part 1: Species and Distribution

dc.contributor.author Maragos, James E.
dc.contributor.author Potts, Donald C.
dc.contributor.author Aeby, Greta
dc.contributor.author Gulko, Dave
dc.contributor.author Kenyon, Jean
dc.contributor.author Siciliano, Daria
dc.contributor.author VanRavenswaay, Dan
dc.date.accessioned 2008-10-03T07:04:28Z
dc.date.available 2008-10-03T07:04:28Z
dc.date.issued 2004-04
dc.description.abstract Rapid Ecological Assessment (REA) surveys at 465 sites on 11 reefs in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands (NWHI) inventoried coral species, their relative abundances, and their distributions during 2000-2002. Surveys (462) around the 10 islands were in depths of ~20 m, and three surveys on the submerged Raita Bank were in depths of 30-35 m. Data from 401 REA sites met criteria for quantitative analysis. Results include 11 first records for stony coral species in the Hawaiian Archipelago and 29 range extensions to the NWHI. Several species may be new to science. There are now 57 stony coral species known in the shallow subtropical waters of the NWHI, similar to the 59 shallow and deep-water species known in the better-studied and more tropical main Hawaiian Islands. Coral endemism is high in the NWHI: 17 endemic species (30%) account for 37-53% of the abundance of stony corals on each reef of the NWHI. Three genera (Montipora, Porites, Pocillopora) contain 15 of the 17 endemic species and most of the endemic abundance. Seven Acropora species are now known from the central NWHI despite their near absence from the main Hawaiian Islands. Coral abundance and diversity are highest at the large, open atolls of the central NWHI (French Frigate, Maro, Lisianski) and decline gradually through the remaining atolls to the northwest (Pearl and Hermes, Midway, and Kure). Stony corals are also less abundant and less diverse off the exposed basalt islands to the southeast (Nihoa, Necker, La Perouse, Gardner), where soft corals (Sinularia, Palythoa) are more abundant. Exposure to severe wave action appears to limit coral development off these small islands and surrounding deep platforms. Temperature extremes and natural accumulation of lagoon sediments may contribute to decline of coral species and abundance at the northwestern end of the chain.
dc.identifier.citation Maragos JE, Potts DC, Aeby G, Gulko D, Kenyon J, Siciliano D, VanRavenswaay D. 2004. 2000-2002 rapid ecological assessment of corals (Anthozoa) on shallow reefs of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. Part 1: species and distribution. Pac Sci 58(2): 211-230.
dc.identifier.issn 0030-8870
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10125/2722
dc.language.iso en-US
dc.publisher University of Hawai'i Press
dc.title 2000-2002 Rapid Ecological Assessment of Corals (Anthozoa) on Shallow Reefs of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. Part 1: Species and Distribution
dc.type Article
dc.type.dcmi Text
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