2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2016.05.021
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Pattern and intensity of human impact on coral reefs depend on depth along the reef profile and on the descriptor adopted

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Cited by 23 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…In general, corals appeared to be in better condition in uninhabited islands compared to both resort and community islands in terms of per cent cover, colony size and prevalence of disease, and corals around resort islands were also better than around community islands. This is likely due to the reduced levels of pollution and physical damage associated with uninhabited areas, shown to affect corals in many ways, and which are higher in the two latter management regimes highlighted here (Brown et al., ; Bruno, Petes, Harvell, & Hettinger, ; Domroes, ; Kaczmarsky, Draud, & Williams, ; Nepote et al., ; Redding et al., ; Vega Thurber et al., ). Indeed, one of the locations where coral disease was prevalent was a community island housing a fish processing factory.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 76%
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“…In general, corals appeared to be in better condition in uninhabited islands compared to both resort and community islands in terms of per cent cover, colony size and prevalence of disease, and corals around resort islands were also better than around community islands. This is likely due to the reduced levels of pollution and physical damage associated with uninhabited areas, shown to affect corals in many ways, and which are higher in the two latter management regimes highlighted here (Brown et al., ; Bruno, Petes, Harvell, & Hettinger, ; Domroes, ; Kaczmarsky, Draud, & Williams, ; Nepote et al., ; Redding et al., ; Vega Thurber et al., ). Indeed, one of the locations where coral disease was prevalent was a community island housing a fish processing factory.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…We observed less abundant fleshy algae, which are sometimes indicative of higher nutrient levels (Fabricius et al., ; McClanahan et al., ; Szmant, ), in resorts compared to both community and uninhabited islands. Algal abundance also appeared to be more abundant in the outer reefs surveyed when compared to those more inside the atoll ring (Nepote et al., ). This could be due to higher water flow, which enhances algal growth (Carpenter & Williams, ; Williams & Carpenter, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
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“…They also have high economic value for local communities, for instance through fishing and tourism (Spalding et al, ). Despite their ecological and economical importance, coral reefs are experiencing serious declines and impacts caused by different factors, including anthropogenic stressors, such climate change, sedimentation, and pollution (Hughes et al, ; Leite et al, ; Liu, Meng, Liu, Wang, & Leu, ; Nepote, Bianchi, Chiantore, Morri, & Montefalcone, ; Nyström, Folke, & Moberg, ; Reichelt‐Brushett & Harrison, ). These disturbances can, independently or synergistically, induce coral mortality, contribute to disease outbreaks, and affect coral reproduction and recruitment (Muthukrishnan & Fong, ; Richmond, ; Richmond, Tisthammer, & Spies, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%