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Mapping warming reefs: an application of multibeam acoustic water column analysis to define threatened abalone habitat

Robust definition of the spatial extent of seafloor habitats and how they may be changing through time is a holy grail for ecosystem management, particularly if an ecosystem is approaching a tipping point beyond which irreversible changes may occur. Here we generate and explore a new data set for the management of warming reefs in eastern Tasmania, Australia that will significantly improve the baseline maps required for fine-scaled spatial modelling and management that is, both robust at regional scales and is highly resolved within the water column. This procedure enabled the relative density of kelp vegetation to be identified in a region that is being overwhelmed by the range extension of a destructive grazer, the Longspined Sea Urchin, Centrostephanus rodgersii. We present a new online tool to visualize multibeam water column acoustic data as surfaces of kelp density at high resolution (50 cm) scale over seafloor terrain maps (spanning a total straight-line distance of 594 km and a total area of 29.14 km2) to reveal the types of reef structure on the East Coast of Tasmania where abalone habitat is threatened by kelp loss.

Funding

Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania

History

Publication title

Frontiers in Remote Sensing

Volume

4

Article number

1149900

Number

1149900

Pagination

1-15

ISSN

2673-6187

Department/School

Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Place of publication

Switzerland

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Assessment and management of coastal and estuarine ecosystems

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