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Reefs from space: Satellite imagery,marine ecology,and ethnography in the Dominican Republic
Authors:Richard W. Stoffle  David B. Halmo  Thomas W. Wagner  Joseph J. Luczkovich
Affiliation:(1) Bureau of Applied Research in Anthropology, University of Arizona, 85721 Tucson, Arizona;(2) Environmental Research Institute of Michigan, 48113 Ann Arbor, Michigan;(3) Institute for Coastal and Marine Resources, East Carolina University, 27858 Greenville, North Carolina
Abstract:Coral reef bleaching is an obvious indication that coastal marine ecosystems are being stressed. However, bleached reefs alone are poor indicators because they reflect the final stages of stress. This research project used multidate satellite imagery to look for coral reef changes as indicators of stress. Findings suggest that (1) satellite imagery can be used to identify small-scale changes in coastal marine ecosystems, including coral reefs; (2) remote sensing, marine ecology, and ethnographic data can be integrated to suggest potential causes of coral reef stress; and (3) changes in reef, seagrass, and mangrove ecozones are more closely tied to fishing, tourism, and land use practices than to global warming.
Keywords:remote sensing  marine ecology  ethnography  fisheries  Dominican Republic
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