Biology and Ecology of the Coral Reefs of the Cayman Islands

2013 
The Cayman islands are three small low-lying subtropical islands in the NW Caribbean. The islands are tips of an underwater mountain chain and have a very narrow coastal shelf, usually of less than 1 km wide, which support considerable reef development. The major sublittoral habitats are coral reefs, lagoons, seagrass beds and mangroves, and fringing reefs shelter large areas of seagrasses and mangroves, the latter being important nursery areas also. There is a high diversity of marine invertebrates, with several molluscs and crustaceans providing commercially significant species. However, substantial recent developments have increased pressures on the marine systems, added to which more recently are stressors resulting from climate change. The islands are hit by hurricanes about once every 10 years, and suffer near-misses four times more often, which greatly affects these habitats. There are a number of different categories of Marine Protected Areas but even so, due to a number of direct anthropogenic stressors as well, coral cover has declined from 25 % to about 11 % over the past 15 years. Physical destruction from shipping and recreational boating has contributed significantly to this, as have various forms of pollution, dredging and shoreline construction, and poaching. The Marine Protected Area system is being reviewed, with specific measures to manage Grouper spawning aggregation sites, and a culling programme is underway in an attempt to control the invasive lionfish which pose the most recent threat to the coral reef fish communities.
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