Gerardo Cabrera-Beauchamp’s scientific contributions

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Publications (2)


Stronger Hurricanes and Climate Change in the Caribbean Sea: Threats to the Sustainability of Endangered Coral Species
  • Article
  • Full-text available

February 2024

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202 Reads

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2 Citations

Sustainability

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Pedro Alejandro-Camis

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Gerardo Cabrera-Beauchamp

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[...]

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An increasing sea surface temperature as a result of climate change has led to a higher frequency and strengthening of hurricanes across the northeastern Caribbean in recent decades, with increasing risks of impacts to endangered corals and to the sustainability of coral reefs. Category five Hurricanes Irma and María during 2017 caused unprecedented damage to coral reef ecosystems across northeastern Puerto Rico, including mechanical destruction, localized sediment bedload (horizontal sediment transport and abrasion), and burial by hurricane-generated rubble fields. Hurricanes inflicted significant site-, depth-, and life history trait-specific impacts to endangered corals, with substantial and widespread mechanical damage to branching species, moderate mechanical damage to foliose species, and moderate to high localized damage to small-sized encrusting and massive morphotypes due to sediment bedload and burial by rubble. There was a mean 35% decline in Acropora palmata live cover, 79% in A. cervicornis, 12% in Orbicella annularis, 7% in O. faveolata, 12% in O. franksi, and 96% in Dendrogyra cylindrus. Hurricane disturbances resulted in a major regime shift favoring dominance by macroalgae, algal turf, and cyanobacteria. Recovery from coral recruitment or fragment reattachment in A. palmata was significantly higher on more distant coral reefs, but there was none for massive endangered species. Stronger hurricanes under projected climate change may represent a major threat to the conservation of endangered coral species and reef sustainability which will require enhancing coral propagation and restoration strategies, and the integration of adaptive, ecosystem-based management approaches. Recommendations are discussed to enhance redundancy, rapid restoration responses, and conservation-oriented strategies.

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Figure 1. Conceptual model of factors affecting coral reef health. 
Figure 2. Locations of study sites through the southwestern Puerto Rico insular platform. These were divided into three geographic areas: inshore reefs (<4 km)-Cayo Ratones (RAT), Punta Ostiones (OST), Punta Lamela (LAM), Punta Guaniquilla (GUA), Bajo Enmedio (EME); mid-shelf reefs (4-8 km)-Arrecife Resuello (RES), Corona del Norte (CON), El Ron (RON); and outer-shelf reefs (8-20 km)-Escollo El Negro (NEG), Arrecife Papa San (PPS), Bajo Gallardo (GAL). Acronyms of protected areas: BEB = Bosque Estatal de Boquerón; CRNWR = Cabo Rojo National Wildlife Refuge; EMRNFB = Extensión Marina Reserva Natural Finca Belvedere; EXRNPG = Extensión Marina Reserva Natural Punta Guaniquilla; EMBEB = Extensión Marina Bosque Estatal Boquerón; RVSIAB = Refugio de Vida Silvestre y de Aves de Boquerón; RNAT = Reserva Natural Arrecifes Tourmaline; RNCR = Reserva Natural Cayo Ratones; RNFB = Reserva Natural Finca Belvedere; RNLJ = Reserva Natural Laguna Joyuda; RNPG = Reserva Natural Punta Guaniquilla. Grayshaded areas in the left image represent coral reefs. 
Figure 3. GIS-based inverse distance weighting (IDW) interpolation showing water turbidity spatial patterns. For location acronyms refer to Figure 2. 
Figure 4. GIS-based inverse distance weighting (IDW) interpolation showing ammonia (NH 3 + ) concentration spatial patterns. For site acronyms refer to Figure 2. 
Figure 5. Coral Reef Resilience Index: (A) Global Index; (B) Coral Index; (C) Threatened Coral Species Index; and (D) Algal Index. Mean ± 95% confidence intervals. For site acronyms refer to Figure 2. 

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Coral Reef Resilience Index for Novel Ecosystems: A Spatial Planning Tool for Managers and Decision Makers - A Case Study from Puerto Rico

March 2018

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1,446 Reads

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3 Citations

Citations (2)


... For instance, in the English-speaking Caribbean, groundwater resources are heavily relied upon, yet their management is often hindered by inadequate infrastructure and policy frameworks (Mycoo and Roopnarine, 2024). Additionally, the intrusion of seawater due to over-pumping and climateinduced sea-level rise exacerbates the quality of groundwater, posing severe risks to water security (Hernandez-Delgado et al., 2024). The Pacific region presents a different set of challenges primarily due to its geographic dispersion and climatic conditions. ...

Reference:

Climate variability impact on groundwater quality in Small Island Developing States: Mauritius Island as a case study
Stronger Hurricanes and Climate Change in the Caribbean Sea: Threats to the Sustainability of Endangered Coral Species

Sustainability

... Major household providers have most of or the sole responsibility to provide for their families, which would explain having higher levels of awareness of their vulnerability to factors negatively impacting their fishing activity, such as climate change, that can lead to reduction or loss of income. Previous studies investigating the impacts of coral bleaching, a phenomenon directly linked to increased ocean temperatures, and other environmental changes on fish assemblages in the Caribbean suggest that climate change is an important factor negatively affecting biomass and diversity of finfish species in the region (see Hern andez-Delgado et al. 2018). It is relevant to note that our results showed relatively high levels of concern among fishers about coral bleaching negatively affecting fisheries during both the pre-and post-storms periods, though less so in the post-storms period for reasons not clearly understood at this time. ...

Coral Reef Resilience Index for Novel Ecosystems: A Spatial Planning Tool for Managers and Decision Makers - A Case Study from Puerto Rico