

Similar to Lau Lau Bay, Coral Gardens is situated
in a protected bay which provides calm oceanic conditions throughout
much of the year. The protected nature of the bay has allowed
thriving reefs to development over the past 5,000 years, resulting
in amazing, three dimensional reef structure today (see photo
below). This, along with its status as a no-take marine preserve,
has turned Coral Gardens into a very desirable destination for
divers.
One major difference between Lau Lau Bay and Coral
Gardens is the nature of the freshwater runoff entering the
marine system. Coral Gardens has relatively small amounts of
surface water discharge when compared with Lau Lau Bay, rather,
freshwater percolates through the limestone rock as groundwater
runoff. Another difference is the lower population adjacent
to Coral Gardens which helps to explain why fewer water quality
violations have occurred over the years in comparison.

The CNMI Marine Monitoring Team has conducted
surveys at Coral Gardens since 2000 with little overall change
noted. Coral community evenness, (see
Lau Lau Bay for further definations and explanation of evenness
and diversity), has changed very little over the years as
the persistence of a Porites rus dominated community
continues to exist. In fact, Porites is so common that
it makes up 95% of all the corals recorded in our benthic video
surveys (see benthic coverage graph below). This dominance is
probably the result of two factors:
1) Very calm oceanic conditions year round create
an environment that is favorable for the persistance and growth
of Porites rus. In the CNMI, reefs that are more exposed
to oceanic swells have less P. rus. On protected reefs
P. rus may be a dominant competitor (see photo of P.
rus overgrowing Goniastrea edwardsi), and has
a plate like growth form that can block out sunlight from other
corals below. Because rough oceanic conditions are rare, these
delicate, plate-like colonies can persist (photo).

2) Acanthaster planci (Crown-of-thorn
Starfish) rarely feed upon Porites corals, rather they
prefer others. Historical reports describe large abundances
of this coral-eating predator once present in Coral Gardens,
and many other reefs around CNMI. Our data suggest that a small,
persistent population still exists. These populations, in combination
with #1 above, are the most probably explanation of P. rus
dominance at Coral Gardens.

Macroinvertebrate abundances have fluctuated over
the past 5 years, however no consistent trends are noted (see
graph below). In general there are healthy abundances of Echinometra
(grazing urchins) that forage upon turf and macroalgae. Grazing
creates a clean, desirable reef substrate for coral and other
invertebrate settlement (see Talakhaya
site for further discussions on grazing and its consequences
for reefs). Small sea cucumber populations have also been
consistently present. Sea cucumbers are desirable because they
feed upon organic matter which settles upon the reef substrate
or sand, thus recycling and reusing the nutrient material. Efficient
recycling is characteristic of healthy reef communities.

Looking for more indepth information? The marine monitoring
program has more detailed information and reports available
upon request.
|