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Ecological Vulnerability of Coral Reef Ecosystem in Wakatobi National Park During Indian Ocean Dipole Event
Author(s) -
Hawis Madduppa,
Alan Frendy Koropitan,
Ario Damar,
Beginer Subhan,
Muh Taufik,
La Ode Alam Minsaris,
Am Azbas Taurusman,
Agus Ramli,
Arif Budi Purwanto
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
hayati journal of biosciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.305
H-Index - 17
eISSN - 2086-4094
pISSN - 1978-3019
DOI - 10.4308/hjb.27.1.57
Subject(s) - coral reef , environmental science , species richness , coral , reef , ecology , adaptive capacity , resilience of coral reefs , ecosystem , climate change , oceanography , geography , fishery , biology , geology
This research examines coral reefs vulnerability which threatening its existences and functions by climate change. The ecological vulnerability in Wakatobi (Wangi-wangi, Kaledupa, Tomia, and Binongko) was assessed during Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) event in 2016. Climate exposure was determined using sea surface temperature, chlorophyll-a concentration, and wind speed magnitude; sensitivity was determined using coral susceptibility, fish susceptibility, and macroalgae primary productivity rate; then adaptive capacity was developed by hard coral cover, coral size distribution, coral richness, fish biomass, herbivore diversity, and herbivore grazing relative to algal production. The values of Exposure, Sensitivity, and Adaptive capacity in Wakatobi were 0.93±0.02, 0.42±0.18, and 0.44±0.10, respectively. Site specific vulnerability scores ranged from 0.52 to 1.60 (mean 0.92±0.26). Binongko was the least vulnerable than other islands. Tomia was observed as the least adaptive capacity and Wangi-wangi was the most bleaching incidents. These results could help coral reefs monitoring priority during the event and then when the event is gone by focusing on the marked islands and sites. Sites that were observed as more vulnerable is urgently need a management strategy to overcome the vulnerability status in the future, such as increasing site adaptability.

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