Caribbean Coasts Stressed Out, Say Researchers

Caribbean Coasts Stressed Out, Say Researchers

KAREN KOLTES PHD RECORDS DATA AT A CARICOMP SITE. BY MEASURING OCEAN HEALTH IN THE SAME WAY AT SITES ACROSS THE CARIBBEAN, IT’S POSSIBLE TO UNDERSTAND WHERE COASTAL ENVIRONMENTS ARE THE MOST STRESSED OUT. (PHOTO CREDIT: KAREN KOLTES/DANIEL C. MILLER)

PANAMA CITY, Panama, Tuesday January 2, 2018 – Just released data about the health of Caribbean coasts show that they are stressed out – but there is still hope for them.

A team including Smithsonian marine biologists released the data from the Caribbean Coastal Marine Productivity Program (CARICOMP) which provides new insights into the influence of both local and global stressors in the basin, and offers some hope that the observed changes can be reversed by local environmental management.

The team gathered CARICOMP data from 29 sites in Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, Bonaire, Colombia, Costa Rica, Florida, Jamaica, Mexico, Panama, Puerto Rico, Saba, and Venezuela and organized it into a single data set.

The largest, longest programme to monitor the health of the Caribbean coastal ecosystems, CARICOMP revealed that water quality decreased at 42 percent of the monitoring stations across the basin. However, significant increases in water temperature, expected in the case of global warming, were not detected across sites.

“We’re seeing important changes in local conditions, like decreases in visibility associated with declining water quality and the increasing presence of people, but we’re not picking up global-scale changes, like climate warming,” said Iliana Chollett, post-doctoral fellow at the Smithsonian Marine Conservation Program in Fort Pierce, Florida.

“Our data set did not reveal significant increases in water temperature,” Chollett said. “Satellites only measure temperature at the surface. Underwater temperatures are much more variable, and it may take decades of data to reveal a significant change, so we’re not sure if this means that we just don’t have enough data to detect it yet.”

ONE OF THE STANDARDIZED MEASUREMENTS TAKEN AT ALL CARICOMP CARIBBEAN MONITORING SITES IS WATER TURBIDITY, AN INDICATOR OF WATER QUALITY. DECREASES IN VISIBILITY WERE MOST LIKELY WHERE HUMAN POPULATIONS INCREASED THE MOST. (PHOTO CREDIT: KAREN KOLTES)

More than 25 years ago, in 1992, researchers at institutions across the Caribbean began to set up stations to gather environmental data on mangroves, seagrass beds and coral reefs at coastal sites.

They began to take weekly measurements of water temperature, salinity and visibility at stations placed to avoid direct interference from cities, towns and other direct human impacts.

Despite attempts to locate monitoring sites in places not affected by human activities, the stations are picking up signals of human influence throughout the Caribbean basin.

“One positive implication of this report is people are capable of dealing with local change by regulating pollution and runoff,” said Rachel Collin, director of the Bocas del Toro Research Station at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, one of the participating marine-monitoring stations. “If people get their act together very soon, there is still hope of reversing some of these changes.”

The MacArthur Foundation, the Coral Reef Initiative of the US Department of State, UNESCO and the US National Science Foundation supported the CARICOMP network as did the individual institutions that run the monitoring stations. (Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute)

Read more: http://www.caribbean360.com/news/caribbean-coasts-stressed-say-researchers#ixzz5341RiPa9

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