Carbonate budgets as indicators of functional reef “health”: a critical review of data underpinning census-based methods and current knowledge gaps
Lange, ID; Perry, CT; Alvarez-Filip, L
Date: 2 December 2019
Article
Journal
Ecological Indicators
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher DOI
Abstract
The carbonate budget of a reef describes the net rate of carbonate production resulting from various
biologically-, physically- and chemically-driven production and erosion processes. Thus, budget state
metrics can provide important information on a reef’s growth potential and on the capacity of reefs to
sustain key geo-ecological ...
The carbonate budget of a reef describes the net rate of carbonate production resulting from various
biologically-, physically- and chemically-driven production and erosion processes. Thus, budget state
metrics can provide important information on a reef’s growth potential and on the capacity of reefs to
sustain key geo-ecological services such as habitat provision and coastal protection. Whilst various
approaches for estimating carbonate budgets exist, census-based methods have gained recent
interest because they quantify the contribution of different functional groups and taxa, and allow
assessments of the links between changing reef ecology and budget states. However, the present
paucity of supporting data on growth and erosion rates for the majority of coral species and reef-associated taxa represents a constraint on these budget estimates and limits meaningful between-site
comparisons. In light of the growing interest in using carbonate budgets as a functional reef “health”
assessment tool, this review thus considers our current state of knowledge regarding the geographic
coverage of existing reef budget states and the availability of relevant supporting data. We use this to
highlight current knowledge gaps, future challenges, and opportunities that emerging techniques may
offer. The primary aim of this review is to encourage increased research efforts on budget states and
underlying metrics in order to better constrain reef carbonate budget estimates from across a broad
range of sites and environments.
Geography - old structure
Collections of Former Colleges
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