Coral reefs in Kuwait occur at high latitude (29 N) and in in extreme environmental conditions (SST range: 13°C to 32°C, annually), and have been subject to chronic anthropogenic pressure in recent decades (recurrent bleaching, oil spills, chronic recreational anchoring and diving impacts). We surveyed coral communities at six sites around Kubbar Island in 2015 and compared these to quantitative survey results collected at the same sites 31 years earlier (1984) as well as to results from several sites resurveyed a decade ago (2003) in order to characterize changes in coral community structure in this marginal reef environment. Mean coral cover was 25% in 2015 compared with 34% in 1984, but declines in coral cover were significant at only one site. The decline in coral cover at this single site was mainly due to a >80% loss of formerly dominant Acropora, and a concomitant shift towards a lower cover community dominated by massive corals. A total of 13 coral genera were observed across sites, comparable to the 12 observed in 1984 and the 13 observed in 2003. Overall, the results of this study indicate a high degree of long term stability in coral community structure in the marginal and heavily disturbed environment of northern Kuwait.
Published in | Journal of Water Resources and Ocean Science (Volume 6, Issue 6) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.wros.20170606.12 |
Page(s) | 85-89 |
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2017. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Coral, Community, Kuwait, Resilience, Stability
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APA Style
Shaker Hamza Alhazeem, John A. Burt, Adel Hasan Alsaffar, Weizhong Chen, Mohammad Abdulla Al-Kandari. (2017). Long-Term Coral Community Stability in a Disturbed Marginal Reef in Kuwait. Journal of Water Resources and Ocean Science, 6(6), 85-89. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.wros.20170606.12
ACS Style
Shaker Hamza Alhazeem; John A. Burt; Adel Hasan Alsaffar; Weizhong Chen; Mohammad Abdulla Al-Kandari. Long-Term Coral Community Stability in a Disturbed Marginal Reef in Kuwait. J. Water Resour. Ocean Sci. 2017, 6(6), 85-89. doi: 10.11648/j.wros.20170606.12
AMA Style
Shaker Hamza Alhazeem, John A. Burt, Adel Hasan Alsaffar, Weizhong Chen, Mohammad Abdulla Al-Kandari. Long-Term Coral Community Stability in a Disturbed Marginal Reef in Kuwait. J Water Resour Ocean Sci. 2017;6(6):85-89. doi: 10.11648/j.wros.20170606.12
@article{10.11648/j.wros.20170606.12, author = {Shaker Hamza Alhazeem and John A. Burt and Adel Hasan Alsaffar and Weizhong Chen and Mohammad Abdulla Al-Kandari}, title = {Long-Term Coral Community Stability in a Disturbed Marginal Reef in Kuwait}, journal = {Journal of Water Resources and Ocean Science}, volume = {6}, number = {6}, pages = {85-89}, doi = {10.11648/j.wros.20170606.12}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.wros.20170606.12}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.wros.20170606.12}, abstract = {Coral reefs in Kuwait occur at high latitude (29 N) and in in extreme environmental conditions (SST range: 13°C to 32°C, annually), and have been subject to chronic anthropogenic pressure in recent decades (recurrent bleaching, oil spills, chronic recreational anchoring and diving impacts). We surveyed coral communities at six sites around Kubbar Island in 2015 and compared these to quantitative survey results collected at the same sites 31 years earlier (1984) as well as to results from several sites resurveyed a decade ago (2003) in order to characterize changes in coral community structure in this marginal reef environment. Mean coral cover was 25% in 2015 compared with 34% in 1984, but declines in coral cover were significant at only one site. The decline in coral cover at this single site was mainly due to a >80% loss of formerly dominant Acropora, and a concomitant shift towards a lower cover community dominated by massive corals. A total of 13 coral genera were observed across sites, comparable to the 12 observed in 1984 and the 13 observed in 2003. Overall, the results of this study indicate a high degree of long term stability in coral community structure in the marginal and heavily disturbed environment of northern Kuwait.}, year = {2017} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Long-Term Coral Community Stability in a Disturbed Marginal Reef in Kuwait AU - Shaker Hamza Alhazeem AU - John A. Burt AU - Adel Hasan Alsaffar AU - Weizhong Chen AU - Mohammad Abdulla Al-Kandari Y1 - 2017/11/29 PY - 2017 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.wros.20170606.12 DO - 10.11648/j.wros.20170606.12 T2 - Journal of Water Resources and Ocean Science JF - Journal of Water Resources and Ocean Science JO - Journal of Water Resources and Ocean Science SP - 85 EP - 89 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2328-7993 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.wros.20170606.12 AB - Coral reefs in Kuwait occur at high latitude (29 N) and in in extreme environmental conditions (SST range: 13°C to 32°C, annually), and have been subject to chronic anthropogenic pressure in recent decades (recurrent bleaching, oil spills, chronic recreational anchoring and diving impacts). We surveyed coral communities at six sites around Kubbar Island in 2015 and compared these to quantitative survey results collected at the same sites 31 years earlier (1984) as well as to results from several sites resurveyed a decade ago (2003) in order to characterize changes in coral community structure in this marginal reef environment. Mean coral cover was 25% in 2015 compared with 34% in 1984, but declines in coral cover were significant at only one site. The decline in coral cover at this single site was mainly due to a >80% loss of formerly dominant Acropora, and a concomitant shift towards a lower cover community dominated by massive corals. A total of 13 coral genera were observed across sites, comparable to the 12 observed in 1984 and the 13 observed in 2003. Overall, the results of this study indicate a high degree of long term stability in coral community structure in the marginal and heavily disturbed environment of northern Kuwait. VL - 6 IS - 6 ER -