Foraminifera as bioindicators in coral reef assessment and monitoring: the FORAM Index. Foraminifera in Reef Assessment and Monitoring |
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Authors: | Hallock Pamela Lidz Barbara H Cockey-Burkhard Elizabeth M Donnelly Kelly B |
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Institution: | (1) College of Marine Science, Univ. of South Florida, 140 Seventh Ave. S., St. Petersburg, FL 33701, USA;(2) U.S. Geological Survey Center for Coastal and Regional Marine Studies, 600 Fourth St. S., St. Petersburg, FL 33701, USA;(3) Minerals Management Service, 381 Elden Street, Herndon, VA 20170, USA;(4) Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, 100 Eighth St. SE, St. Petersburg, FL 33701, USA |
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Abstract: | Coral reef communities are threatened worldwide. Resource managers urgently need indicators of the biological condition of reef environments that can relate data acquired through remote-sensing, water-quality and benthic-community monitoring to stress responses in reef organisms. The FORAM (Foraminifera in Reef Assessment and Monitoring) Index (FI) is based on 30 years of research on reef sediments and reef-dwelling larger foraminifers. These shelled protists are ideal indicator organisms because: Foraminifers are widely used as environmental and paleoenvironmental indicators in many contexts; Reef-building, zooxanthellate corals and foraminifers with algal symbionts have similar water-quality requirements; The relatively short life spans of foraminifers as compared with long-lived colonial corals facilitate differentiation between long-term water-quality decline and episodic stress events; Foraminifers are relatively small and abundant, permitting statistically significant sample sizes to be collected quickly and relatively inexpensively, ideally as a component of comprehensive monitoring programs; and Collection of foraminifers has minimal impact on reef resources.USEPA guidelines for ecological indicators are used to evaluate the FI. Data required are foraminiferal assemblages from surface sediments of reef-associated environments. The FI provides resource managers with a simple procedure for determining the suitability of benthic environments for communities dominated by algal symbiotic organisms. The FI can be applied independently, or incorporated into existing or planned monitoring efforts. The simple calculations require limited computer capabilities and therefore can be applied readily to reef-associated environments worldwide. In addition, the foraminiferal shells collected can be subjected to morphometric and geochemical analyses in areas of suspected heavy-metal pollution, and the data sets for the index can be used with other monitoring data in detailed multidimensional assessments. |
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Keywords: | bioindicators coral reefs Foraminifera zooxanthellae algal symbiosis |
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