Showing posts with label WAMSI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WAMSI. Show all posts

Monday, April 1, 2013

Coastal activity survey to include people ‘head count’ too

Science Network Western Australia.
A Murdoch University marine scientist has just commenced an aerial survey of the western Kimberley coast.
It will comprise one of the studies intended to inform the management of the new marine parks network.
Professor Lynnath Beckley is taking high-resolution photographs of the coast from a light aircraft before analysing them for the physical presence of humans and their likely activities.
She says people counts are frequently neglected in ecological surveys.
“Generally we find out where the fish are, we find out where the whales are, [but] we actually don’t look where the people are,” she says.
She says the technique has been extensively used in fisheries surveys.
“We generally use 500 meters from the high tide mark as a cut off for our surveys.
“We cover that interface between the land and the sea, and we usually monitor vessels and what they’re doing out to about five kilometres from the coast.
“When we fly we photograph every single activity we see.
“All our digital photos are date-stamped [and] time-stamped against the flight line.
“We’ve got a GPS logger running so we’ve got [the] actual flight line.
“And then we’ve got some crafty software that we’re using now to bring the photos into a database and we identify all the activities in the photos.
“So for example I shoot a photo of the coast line, I know exactly where I am and I see three four-wheel-drive vehicles, three people standing in the shore fishing, two people lying in the sun burning themselves, and three kids swimming, then we detail all of those activities and yes, we map all that sort of stuff.”
She says it takes 2-3 hours to survey 4-500km of coastline.
There are three flight lines; Port Hedland to Broome taking in the Eighty-Mile Beach and Roebuck Bay; Crab Creek to Point Torment including the Dampier Peninsula coastline; and north of Point Torment, taking in the Buccaneer Archipelago and the Camden Sound coast.
“You get an accurate snapshot of where everyone is at the same time,” she says.
“You have people using the coast for recreation and for tourism, for cultural pursuits, for traditional things.
“Mostly people value the biodiversity … but people use that coast all the time, from traditional use, cultural use, to recreation use by the locals, tourists that come in—I think it’s a misnomer to think the western Kimberley coast is pristine.”
Notes: This is a WAMSI project, conducted by Murdoch University scientists under the direction of Prof Beckley.
This story pertains to deliveries in themes 1, 2 and 3 of the Kimberley Science and Conservation Strategy.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Kimberley coral spawning treats scientists to rare show

Thursday, 24 May 2012 10:00
Science Network Western Australia

CORAL spawning in the Kimberley coastline was recently first-witnessed by WA researchers, as slicks of blue and pink gametes lit the dark waters after sunset.


coral spawnDr Andrew Heyward from the Australian Marine Science Institute, who provided guidance to the KMRS leading up to the event, says observing the coral spawning is a first step in identifying the key seasonal patterns for corals along the Kimberley coast. Image:hjk_888

Recorded about 6.30pm on March 17 at the WAMSI partnered Kimberley Marine Research Station (KMRS) in Cygnet Bay, Research Officer Ali McCarthy says “the combination of natural phenomena with the wild wet season weather overhead and this remarkable spawning snowstorm under the surface was genuinely awe-inspiring.”
“We saw the first signs of spawning activity as turquoise gametes were released from the Faviid and Mussid corals and shortly afterwards, the Acroporid corals began releasing their gametes into the water and the aquariums were awash with slicks of blue and pink spawn.”
“From a scientific perspective, it was really exciting in that this was something new, not just for me or for us at KMRS, but for the greater Kimberley coastline as a whole, where it had been acknowledged that in general the finer details of spawning activity along the mainland Kimberley coast were not well studied and had not yet been observed directly for science.”
Dr Andrew Heyward from the Australian Marine Science Institute, who provided guidance to the KMRS leading up to the event, says observing the coral spawning is a first step in identifying the key seasonal patterns for corals along the Kimberley coast.
“If it turns out most corals spawn along the Kimberley at certain times of year then we can look at the currents and get a much better idea of which way the spawn will travel and hence, how connected different parts of the coast are.
“At a broader level, these initial observations at Cygnet Bay show that for some coral species at least, their reproductive patterns and timing are the same as offshore reefs in the region such as Scott Reef and the Rowley Shoals.
“As we extend these studies, it may be that the biology of corals in the region is shown to be quite similar to what we know from better studied reef areas.”
Although spawning demonstrates a time of renewal for our reef building corals, Ms McCarthy says the Kimberley corals as a whole are not well understood due to their remoteness.
“It is only in recent years that their uniqueness and high biodiversity have been explored and recognised in a western science perspective,” she says.
The observations are just a building block from which to launch further investigations and establish monitoring programs.
It is hoped the KMRS can begin to collate a series of data over time and start to fill the knowledge gaps that surround the Kimberley marine environment.