TY - JOUR
T1 - ReefBahia, an integrated GIS approach for coral reef conservation in Bahia, Brazil
AU - Carvalho, Rafael Cabral
AU - de Kikuchi, Ruy Kenji Papa
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments The authors are grateful to the Brazilian Ministry of Education (CAPES) and the Brazilian Research Council (CNPq) for their grant support, as well as, the two anonymous reviewers for their comments and suggestions on a previous draft of the manuscript.
PY - 2013/6
Y1 - 2013/6
N2 - Coral reefs around the world are facing serious threats. These fragile ecosystems are in need for conservation. The coastal state of Bahia hosts the most extensive and richest area of coral reefs in the South Atlantic Ocean. Assessment, planning and management of coral reef ecosystems are particularly challenging tasks. This work shows how the creation of a GIS improves the process of management, monitoring and conservation of the Bahian reef environments The initial data input started by the vectorization of 1) bathymetric data from the Bureau of Hydrography and Navigation (DHN), 2) shoreline and mangrove areas from Landsat 7 ETM + images, 3) near surface reefs from Quickbird images, and 4) coastal and marine protected areas of federal, state and local administrations. Geological, physical, biological and social information was then included in order to create a suitable marine GIS for conservation aims. The data includes information on sediment granulometry and transport patterns, rocky substrate outcrops, sea surface temperature, wave direction, rain precipitation, major contributing river discharge, artisanal fishery, benthic cover and bleaching data. ReefBahia GIS has provided essential information for a better understanding of coral reefs of the state of Bahia geological and ecological characteristics such as mapping, representation, connectivity and biodiversity of coral reefs, geological facies, Quaternary sedimentation, numeric modeling of wave refraction and monitoring of bleaching events.
AB - Coral reefs around the world are facing serious threats. These fragile ecosystems are in need for conservation. The coastal state of Bahia hosts the most extensive and richest area of coral reefs in the South Atlantic Ocean. Assessment, planning and management of coral reef ecosystems are particularly challenging tasks. This work shows how the creation of a GIS improves the process of management, monitoring and conservation of the Bahian reef environments The initial data input started by the vectorization of 1) bathymetric data from the Bureau of Hydrography and Navigation (DHN), 2) shoreline and mangrove areas from Landsat 7 ETM + images, 3) near surface reefs from Quickbird images, and 4) coastal and marine protected areas of federal, state and local administrations. Geological, physical, biological and social information was then included in order to create a suitable marine GIS for conservation aims. The data includes information on sediment granulometry and transport patterns, rocky substrate outcrops, sea surface temperature, wave direction, rain precipitation, major contributing river discharge, artisanal fishery, benthic cover and bleaching data. ReefBahia GIS has provided essential information for a better understanding of coral reefs of the state of Bahia geological and ecological characteristics such as mapping, representation, connectivity and biodiversity of coral reefs, geological facies, Quaternary sedimentation, numeric modeling of wave refraction and monitoring of bleaching events.
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Biodiversity
KW - Climate change
KW - Coastal conservation
KW - Reef monitoring
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84878108121&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11852-013-0243-6
DO - 10.1007/s11852-013-0243-6
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84878108121
SN - 1400-0350
VL - 17
SP - 239
EP - 252
JO - Journal of Coastal Conservation
JF - Journal of Coastal Conservation
IS - 2
ER -