JOURNAL OF COASTAL DEVELOPMENT
Vol 14, No 1 (2010): Volume 14, Number 1, Year 2010

NATURAL CORAL COLONIZATION OF A MARINA SEAWALL IN SINGAPORE

Chou Loke Ming (Unknown)
NG Chin Soon Lionel (Unknown)
Chan Sek Meng Jeremy (Unknown)
Seow Liyun Angie (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 May 2011

Abstract

Marinas require extensive modification of a natural coast. The resulting modified habitat is known to supportchanged biological communities but the ability of tropical marinas to function as a surrogate habitat forscleractinian corals has not been well investigated. An assessment of scleractinian corals naturallycolonising a nine-year-old marina seawall in Singapore indicated 26 genera from 13 families, of whichPectinia and Turbinaria were the most dominant. Most colonies measured 10 – 25 cm in diameter. Reefs ofadjacent islands provided the larval source while the marina’s environmental conditions favored larvalrecruitment and growth. Specific larval settlement preferences as well as sediment rejection capabilities ofthe two most common genera could have contributed to their dominance. The study showed that the seawallof a marina can support scleractinian coral communities and with relevant management, can significantlyenhance marine biodiversity.

Copyrights © 2010






Journal Info

Abbrev

coastdev

Publisher

Subject

Education

Description

The Journal of Coastal Development (ISSN 1410-5217) is dedicated to all aspects of the increasingly important fields of coastal and marine development, including but not limited to biological, chemical, cultural, economic, social, medical, and physical development. The journal is jointly published ...