Abstract

Imaging the marine environment is more and more useful to understand relationships between species, as well as natural processes. Developing photogrammetry allowed the use of 3D measuring to study populations dynamics of sessile organisms at various scales: from colony to population. This study focuses on red coral (Corallium rubrum), as known as precious coral. Metrics measured at a colony scale (e.g., maximum height, diameter and number of branches) allowed population understanding and a comparison between an old (Cerbère-Banyuls reserve) vs. a new (Calanques National Park) MPA. Our results suggested a 5-year time step allows the appearance of a significant difference between populations inside vs. outside the Calanques National Park no-take zones. Red coral colonies were taller and had more branches inside no-take zones. A significant difference was still observable for the populations inside the Cerbère-Banyuls reserve after 40 years of protection, reflecting the sustainability and effectiveness of precautionary measures set by the reserve. The impacts at the local level (mechanical destruction) and those presumed to occur via global change (climatic variations) underline the need to develop strategies both to follow the evolutions of red coral populations but also to understand their resilience. Photogrammetry induced modeling is a time and cost effective as well as non-invasive method which could be used to understand population dynamics at a seascape scale on coralligenous reefs.

Highlights

  • Marine protected areas (MPAs) efficiency is a great question when one species conservation is at stake

  • The present paper presents a comparison between two marine protected areas in the Mediterranean and their implication in red coral conservation: the 40 years old Cerbère-Banyuls Reserve (CB reserve) and the 5 years old Calanques National Park (Calanques NP)

  • This study provides valuable demographic data obtained through photogrammetry to help infer the long-term effects of effective protection on red coral populations in 2 Mediterranean MPAs, which encompass an important geographic scale

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Summary

Introduction

Marine protected areas (MPAs) efficiency is a great question when one species conservation is at stake. Some Mediterranean MPAs have shown efficiency to protect sessile species such as endangered red coral (Corallium rubrum). Mediterranean red coral Corallium rubrum (Linnaeus, 1758) is a long-lived suspensivorous colonial octocoralliary belonging to the Corallidae family. Adult individuals are polyps living in clonal colonies that can bring together several hundred individuals (Torrents, 2007). This species is found in low light, strong hydrodynamic and low temperature conditions (Torrents, 2007; Linares et al, 2010) mainly colonizing overhangs, anfractuosities and cave entrances on hard substrates (Gibson et al, 2006)

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