Abstract

Sixteen months after Hurricane Allen, an assessment of the condition (living vs. dead and encrusted) and volume of staghorn coral, Acropora cervicomis Lamarck, patches within the East Back Reef of Discovery Bay, Jamaica was made. Data generated by this assessment were compared with similar data collected in 1975–1976 prior to the storm. Densities of two urchins, Diadema antillarum Philippi and Echinometra viridis A. Agassiz, and the threespot damselfish, Eupomacentrus planifrons Cuvier, within the coral patches were also measured. Although staghorn coral patches were significantly smaller (− 65%) in mean volume in 1981 compared to 1975–1976, 22% of the patches were unchanged since 1976 or had increased in volume and only 9% were reduced to piles of rubble. Diadema and threespot densities were significantly higher than in 1976. Mortality of damselfish and larger Diadema appeared to have been reduced. Coral patches with both damselfish and Diadema present exhibited a high proportion of living coral tissue, while those patches dominated by either damselfish or Diadema were overgrazed with < 5% of the substrata covered by living coral. Similarly, the fore reef exhibited high urchin and low damselfish densities, possibly contributing to its low proportion of living coral.

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