Colonization of Hawaiian reef corals on new and denuded substrata in the vicinity of a Hawaiian power station

1984 
The colonization and growth of reef corals settling on new substrata (concrete and basalt) and on a denuded coral reef were studied over a seven-year period. The study area is in the vicinity of an outfall discharging thermal effluent from a Hawaiian power station, and both numbers and coverage of settled corals were found to increase exponentially with proximity to the outfall's discharge. Recruitment rates adjacent to the outfall were at least ten times greater than values previously reported for open ocean areas in Hawaii, and the estimated time for recovery of the coral community near the outfall was comparable to the most rapid that has been reported worldwide. By contrast, coral recruitment and recovery more distant from the outfall compared well with slower rates reported for other areas in Hawaii. Entrainment of coral planulae in water discharged into the area by the outfall is proposed to be the principal mechanism promoting the high coral colonization.
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