Posts

Showing posts from December, 2022

BREAM reports related to Marine Spatial Planning or Fish Stock Analysis

Image
Click each title below to launch a new window with the relevant report as pdf document Murdoch TJT, Glasspool AG, Outerbridge M, Manuel SA (2004) The Status of Seagrass Habitats in Bermuda. Bermuda Reef Ecosystem Assessment and Mapping (BREAM) Programme, Bermuda Zoological Society, Flatts, Bermuda. . 137 pp. Murdoch TJT, Hammond PJ, Glasspool AF, Outerbridge M, Clee J, Shailer M, Colella M (2008) A multi-scale assessment of the benthic communities of Bermuda's shallow water platform, focusing on existing MPA's & control sites to enhance local management practices. Bermuda Reef Ecosystem Assessment and Mapping (BREAM) Programme, Bermuda Zoological Society, Flatts, Bermuda. 88 pp. Hammond PJ, Murdoch TJT, Glasspool AF, Outerbridge M, Clee J, Shailer M, Colella M (2008) Assessment of Spatial Management Practices for Enhancing Fish Populations in Bermuda.  Bermuda Reef Ecosystem Assessment and Mapping (BREAM) Programme, Bermuda Zoological Society, Flatts, Bermuda. ...

Summary of BREAM Report: Baseline condition of the coral reefs and fishes across three depth zones of the forereef of Bermuda.

  Murdoch TJT, Murdoch JMH (2016) Baseline condition of the coral reefs and fishes across three depth zones of the forereef of Bermuda. BREAM: Bermuda Reef Ecosystem Analysis and Monitoring Programme Report, Bermuda Zoological Society, Flatts Bermuda. BBP-2016-237. Link HERE Synopsis Bermuda’s coral reefs protect our beaches and coastal properties from erosion, and high coral cover and abundant parrotfishes make our coral reefs healthy. Predatory fishes like snappers and rockfishes play a critical role in maintaining reef health by eating the kinds of fishes which damage corals and promote healthy herbivorous (plant-eating) fish populations. In this report, we provide clear evidence that historically abundant predatory fishes are rare and at critically low biomass levels on Bermuda reefs. The cover of corals remains high at forereef locations, but is lower at 30m depth, within the lagoon and particularly at nearshore reefs, where marine plants are overly abundant and plant-eating f...