Literature DB >> 16054653

Shifting the paradigm of coral-reef 'health' assessment.

Craig A Downs1, Cheryl M Woodley, Robert H Richmond, Lynda L Lanning, Richard Owen.   

Abstract

Coral reefs are in crisis. Globally, our reefs are degrading at an accelerating rate and present methodologies for coral-reef 'health' assessment, although providing important information in describing these global declines, have been unable to halt these declines. These assessments are usually employed with no clear purpose and using uncorrelated methods resulting in a failure to prevent or mitigate coral reef deterioration. If we are to ever successfully intervene, we must move beyond the current paradigm, where assessments and intervention decisions are based primarily on descriptive science and embrace a paradigm that promotes both descriptive and mechanistic science to recognize a problem, and recognize it before it becomes a crisis. The primary methodology in this alternative paradigm is analogous to the clinical and diagnostic methodologies of evidence-based medicine. Adopting this new paradigm can provide the evidence to target management actions on those stressors currently impacting reef ecosystems as well as providing a means for proactive management actions to avert irreversible habitat decline.

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16054653     DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2005.06.028

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mar Pollut Bull        ISSN: 0025-326X            Impact factor:   5.553


  7 in total

1.  The use of cellular diagnostics for identifying sub-lethal stress in reef corals.

Authors:  Craig A Downs; Gary K Ostrander; Luc Rougee; Teina Rongo; Sean Knutson; David E Williams; Wendy Mendiola; Jackalyn Holbrook; Robert H Richmond
Journal:  Ecotoxicology       Date:  2012-01-05       Impact factor: 2.823

2.  In vitro cell-toxicity screening as an alternative animal model for coral toxicology: effects of heat stress, sulfide, rotenone, cyanide, and cuprous oxide on cell viability and mitochondrial function.

Authors:  Craig A Downs; John E Fauth; Virgil D Downs; Gary K Ostrander
Journal:  Ecotoxicology       Date:  2010-01       Impact factor: 2.823

3.  Assessment of the water quality and ecosystem health of the Great Barrier Reef (Australia): conceptual models.

Authors:  David Haynes; Jon Brodie; Jane Waterhouse; Zoe Bainbridge; Deb Bass; Barry Hart
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2007-09-05       Impact factor: 3.266

4.  A survey of environmental pollutants and cellular-stress markers of Porites astreoides at six sites in St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands.

Authors:  Craig A Downs; Cheryl M Woodley; John E Fauth; Sean Knutson; Martina Maria Burtscher; Lisa A May; Athena R Avadanei; Julie L Higgins; Gary K Ostrander
Journal:  Ecotoxicology       Date:  2011-07-07       Impact factor: 2.823

5.  Distinctive wound-healing characteristics in the corals Pocillopora damicornis and Acropora hyacinthus found in two different temperature regimes.

Authors:  Nikki Traylor-Knowles
Journal:  Mar Biol       Date:  2016-10-18       Impact factor: 2.573

6.  Elevated Temperature and Allelopathy Impact Coral Recruitment.

Authors:  Raphael Ritson-Williams; Cliff Ross; Valerie J Paul
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-12-07       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Hyperspectral sensing of disease stress in the Caribbean reef-building coral, Orbicella faveolata - perspectives for the field of coral disease monitoring.

Authors:  David A Anderson; Roy A Armstrong; Ernesto Weil
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-12-04       Impact factor: 3.240

  7 in total

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