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Sewage-derived resort runoff threatens coral reefs? A pilot isotopic assessment of nitrogen at Pulau Redang, Malaysia
Lachs, L. (2018). Sewage-derived resort runoff threatens coral reefs? A pilot isotopic assessment of nitrogen at Pulau Redang, Malaysia. MSc Thesis. Université Libre de Bruxelles/Vrije Universiteit Brussel/University of Firenze, Department of Plant Biology, Laboratory of Phytogeography: Brussel/Firenze. 46 pp.

Thesis info:

Available in  Author 
    Vlaams Instituut voor de Zee: Non-open access 322619 [ request ]
Document type: Dissertation

Keywords
    Characteristics > Diversity
    Dominance
    Isotopes > Stable isotopes
    Marine parks
    Resilience
    Tourism
    Water quality
    Marine/Coastal

Author  Top 
  • Lachs, L.

Abstract
    In the Anthropocene coral reefs are threatened by a host of global and local stressors. In the past two decades development of island tourism at Pulau Redang, Peninsular Malaysia, has increased the annual number of visitors by an order of magnitude, from 22,725 visitors in 1995 to 184,043 visitors in 2017. Sewage-derived nutrient enrichment has emerged as a potential ecosystem scale threat to coral reefs around this island. Here, the spatial extent of sewage-derived nutrient sources across Redang is assessed using stable isotopic techniques to measure δ15N in competitive macroalgae (Lobophora spp.), corallivorous gastropods (Drupella spp.), and branching corals (Acropora spp.), representing nutrient uptake over multiple temporal scales. Combining δ15N with conventional benthic reef monitoring data, we then test the relationship between δ15N and coral reef community composition with a multivariate approach on all 55 benthic cover types, and a univariate approach on community structure indices and major benthic group coverage. We show that Acropora has the best potential as a bioindicator of pollution at Redang. Significantly higher enrichment of Acropora δ15N was identified in the tourist hub on the east coast (3.85 ‰ ± 0.18 SE), where septic tanks and eutrophic waste-water outflows are potential nutrient sources, compared to pristine reefs on the uninhabited northern and western sides (3.02 ‰ ± 0.04 SE). Regional Acropora δ15N was significantly correlated to regional variance of cover type richness, Shannon diversity index, and Simpson dominance index; coexistence of coral-dominated reefs alongside degraded zoanthid barrens was only found in the tourist hub region. In Terengganu there is a need for better cooperation between state and marine park authorities to ensure that tourism-derived nutrient enrichment does not cause reef degradation. Determining the ecological impact caused by nutrient enrichment is an important first step in the long-term sustainable development of tourism on the now-booming Terengganu islands.

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