Coral Reef Report Cards 2016 Grenada Coral Reef Report Card | Page 8

Eastern Caribbean Regional Overview • Endangered elkhorn/staghorn corals are recovering (NE island areas) • Fleshy algae are often found on leeward reefs and near settlements • Lack of large parrotfish has reduced grazing on several reefs • Diadema urchins are abundant on several reef types in the EC • Reefs with greater structure and relief have higher fish abundance • Reefs under some level of protection have higher fish abundance, especially fully protected areas and longer established MMAs St. Kitts & Nevis 25 Antigua & Barbuda 29/121 16 The long-term health and resilience of these ecosystems will depend on both effective local management and adopting collaborative and transboundary management strategies among the 6 nations. • Currently 44 designated MMAs protect 526 km 2 of marine resources • Many MMAs were designated >25 years ago (17 of 44) • Most of the designated MMAs are small (27 of 44 are <10 km 2 ) • Few MMAs are fully protected “no take” zones, which had more fish • Several key nursery areas with adjacent coral, mangrove & seagrass remain unprotected • 50 new proposed MMAs will protect 990 km 2 of marine resources 2.5 277 Sites Saba Sint-Eustasius m Co m F Reef Health Index Montserrat = Score Guadeloupe 2.3 2.3 Martinque Dominica Status of MMAs in the Eastern Caribbean RHI s h r ou s # sites Ma Fle cro The Region’s overall Reef Health Index (RHI) score was “fair” (2.5 of 5). Coral cover and herbivorous fish biomass were scored “fair”, while fleshy macroalgae and commercial fish biomass were “poor”. Reef condition varied at the local scale, but several regional patterns of reef condition were common: ver Co Status of coral reefs in the Eastern Caribbean (EC) Saint Lucia 17 St. Vincent & Grenadines 42 Grenada 27 2.8 2.8 2.8 2.5 No Data Very Good Next Steps The following Management Recommendations and Monitoring Priorities are suggested to help protect Grenada’s coral reefs : I. Management Recommendations A. Continue MMA support & management to help reefs recover B. Continue protecting parrotfish to reduce seaweed C. Create more fully protected replenishment areas to let fish grow larger and produce more fish for the future D. Protect reefs adjacent to mangrove and seagrass beds E. Improve nearshore water quality to increase reef resilience F. Improve ridge to reef management to reduce impact of land based activities II. Monitoring Priorities A. Coral Reef Monitoring 1. Surveys in 2016 (Grand Anse, WCCMPA, SIOBMPA) 2. Survey strategic reefs: Grenada gaps - Subregion 3 (South seascape, Conference Bay, Levera), Subregion 5 (Ronde Island); Carriacou - Subregion 6 (gaps), Subregion 7 (representative, lobster/ conch surveys), Petite Martinique 3. Establish long-term monitoring sites B. Socioeconomic monitoring in MMAs C. MMA effectiveness monitoring D. Produce Repor t Cards in 2017 based on 2016 surveys E. Update CaribNode data platform with new data (caribnode.org) Ken Marks The return of healthy endangered elkhorn corals gives hope for the future