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The Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, located in the southeast corner
of the Caribbean Sea off the coast of Venezuela, is influenced seasonally
by floodwaters of the Orinoco River. Because of the direct influence
of the Orinoco plume, Trinidad has little coral reef development
compared to its more offshore sister island of Tobago. Discharges
from the Orinoco River influence Tobago’s coral reefs during
the wet season with lower salinity and higher turbidity floodwaters,
which reduce light availability needed for coral growth. This chronic,
seasonal stress has long affected Tobago’s coral reefs but
has not prevented the development of massive and biologicaly diverse
coral reef formations, such as those found at Buccoo Reef and Culloden
Reef.
Over the past two decades there has been increasing concern among
scientists, resource managers, and the public alike regarding the
ecological impacts of localized runoff and nutrient pollution on
Tobago’s coral reefs. Increased turbidity and sedimentation
from deforestation is well known to stress corals and can be fatal
in some situations. Enrichment of coastal waters with nitrogen(N)
and phosphorus (P) from deforestation, agricultural and urban runoff,
and sewage, although more subtle, has become the largest pollution
problem facing the vital coastal waters of the wider Caribbean region.
Nutrient pollution is the common thread that links an array of environmental
problems that include eutrophication, harmful algal blooms, “dead
zones”, fish kills, loss of seagrasses and coral reefs, and
even some marine mammal and seabird deaths. Because coral reefs
have adapted over hundreds of millions of years to clear, clean
water with low concentrations of N and P, the impacts of nutrient
pollution on coral reefs can be particularly severe.
To address the status and extent of nutrient pollution on Tobago’s
fringing reefs, a seasonal (“wet” versus “dry”)
study of water quality and benthic biota was undertaken at a variety
of Tobago’s fringing coral reefs in 2001.
The results showed:
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Nutrient over-enrichment of Tobago’s
fringing coral reefs, especially Buccoo Reef, from local nutrient
sources has triggered ecological changes that have decreased living
coral cover and biological diversity.
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At Buccoo Reef, reduced coral cover correlated
significantly with increased cover of macroalgae and the zoanthid
Palythoa both of which are indicators of nutrient enrichment on
Caribbean coral reefs.
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Recent encroachment of the seagrasses Thalassia
testudinum (turtle grass) and Halodule wrightii (Cuban shoalweed)
into the sandy sediments of Nylon Pool are symptomatic of nutrient
enrichment.
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Coral diseases, including white band disease,
yellow band disease, and black band disease, occurred at a number
of reef sites around Tobago. The dominant coral at Culloden Reef
-- Montastrea annularis -- was impacted by an outbreak of yellow
band disease that has apparently developed in just the past few
years following increased deforestation and development of its
watershed.
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Concentrations of dissolved inorganic nitrogen
(DIN) increased significantly on reef sites around Tobago from
the dry season to the wet season. The increased DIN concentrations
resulted in significant decreases in concentrations of soluble
reactive phosphorus (SRP). Low DIN:SRP ratios (< 15:1) year-around
indicate N-limitation of algal growth in Tobago’s coastal
waters.
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High values (> 3 o/oo) of 15N/14N in macroalgae
from the Buccoo Reef Complex and other fringing reefs off southwestern
Tobago occurred during both wet and dry seasons and were indicative
of land-based sewage N pollution from the upland watershed.
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The 15N/14N values of macroalgae from Black
Jack Hole off Little Tobago Island increased from relatively low
values (< 3 o/oo) in the dry season to high values (> 5.0
o/oo) in the wet season, indicating increased dispersion of sewage
N during periods of peak runoff.
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Levels of phytoplankton biomass, measured as
chlorophyll a, increased from the dry season to the wet season
at reef sites around Tobago that had relatively low impacts of
sewage enrichment (e.g. Black Jack Hole and Kelliston Drain off
Speyside). Reefs that were chronically impacted by sewage pollution
showed relatively little effect of the wet season runoff on chlorophyll
a.
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Some of the highest coral cover of the study
occurred at Black Jack Hole off Little Tobago Island, the site
with the lowest annual mean concentrations of DIN, chlorophyll
a, and 15N/14N in macroalgae.
These results support the hypothesis that recent increases in local
nutrient pollution, especially from sewage, have pushed Tobago’s
coral reefs over the threshold indicative of eutrophication on Caribbean
coral reefs. To restore and protect its vitally important coral
reefs, Tobago should work to reverse nutrient pollution and sedimentation
wherever possible. Meeting this goal will require an array of strategies
and approaches tailored to specific reefs and upland developments.
For some reefs such as the Buccoo Reef Complex and Mt. Irvine, diversion
of human sewage and animal wastes may be sufficient to reverse eutrophication
and restore reef health. For most fringing reefs, however, the solutions
will be more complex and may involve incentives to reduce deforestation,
sewage pollution, urbanization, fertilizer use, and agricultural
activities.
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