Abstract

Significant coral reef decline has been observed in Colombia during the last three decades. However, due to the lack of monitoring activities, most of the information about health and changes was fragmentary or inadequate. To develop an expanded nation-wide reef-monitoring program, in 1998 INVEMAR (Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras: "Colombian Institute of Marine and Coastal Research") designed and implemented SIMAC (Sistema Nacional de Monitorco de Arrecifes Coralinos en Colombia: "National Monitoring System of Coral Reefs in Colombia") with the participation of other institutions. By the end of 2003 the SIMAC network reached more than twice its initial size, covering ten reef areas (seven in the Caribbean and three in the Pacific), 63 reef sites and 263 permanent transects. SIMAC monitoring continued without interruption until 2008 and should persist in the long-term. The SIMAC has a large database and consists basically of water quality measurements (temperature, salinity, turbidity) and a yearly estimation of benthic reef cover, coral disease prevalence, gorgonian density, abundance of important mobile invertebrates, fish diversity and abundance of important fish species. A methods manual is available in the Internet. Data and results of SIMAC have been widely circulated through a summary report published annually since 2000 for the Colombian environmental agencies and the general public, as well as numerous national and international scientific papers and presentations at meetings. SIMAC information has contributed to support regional and global reef monitoring networks and databases (i.e. CARICOMP, GCRMN, ReefBase).

Highlights

  • In Colombia, reef monitoring began towards the end of 1992 when Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras (INVEMAR) joined the CARICOMP (Caribbean Coastal Marine Productivity) program and implemented a permanent monitoring site in Chengue Bay on the Caribbean coast

  • Based on the experience gained with CARICOMP and with the purpose of developing an expanded nation-wide reef-monitoring program, in 1998 INVEMAR designed and implemented SIMAC (“Sistema Nacional de Monitoreo de Arrecifes Coralinos en Colombia”), with the support of COLCIENCIAS and several other Colombian institutions (CORALINA, UAESPNN, CEINER, Universidad del Valle, and Universidad Nacional)

  • Afterwards, more monitoring stations have been added progressively with the collaboration of additional institutions (MAVDT, UNEP-RCU/CAR, Universidad de Antioquia), so that in 2003, the SIMAC network reached more than twice its initial size, covering ten reef areas, 63 reef sites and 263 permanent transects

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Summary

Introduction

The six reef sites for SIMAC monitoring are located in the Southern portion of the leeward coast where human impact is low and fringing coral communities are well developed below six meter depth. The littoral rocky belt that extends underwater to 30m depth support poorly developed but diverse coral communities and fringing reefs (Werding & Sánchez 1989, Garzón-Ferreira & Díaz 2003).The area is seasonally affected by upwelling waters during dry months (December-March) and by continental runoff during rainy season (MayNovember).

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Conclusion
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