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High spatial resolution photo mosaicking for the monitoring of coralligenous reefs

Coral Reefs 2021 12 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Edoardo Casoli, Daniela Silvia Pace, Daniele Ventura Daniele Ventura Daniele Ventura Daniele Ventura Gianluca Mancini, Daniela Silvia Pace, Andrea Belluscio, G.D. Ardizzone, G.D. Ardizzone, Daniele Ventura Daniele Ventura

Summary

Researchers developed a high-resolution photomosaic method using underwater cameras to monitor coralligenous reef ecosystems without disturbing them. These deep-water reef habitats are increasingly impacted by marine litter including plastic debris, which can smother and damage their complex structures.

Abstract Coralligenous reefs are characterized by large bathymetric and spatial distribution, as well as heterogeneity; in shallow environments, they develop mainly on vertical and sub-vertical rocky walls. Mainly diver-based techniques are carried out to gain detailed information on such habitats. Here, we propose a non-destructive and multi-purpose photo mosaicking method to study and monitor coralligenous reefs developing on vertical walls. High-pixel resolution images using three different commercial cameras were acquired on a 10 m 2 reef, to compare the effectiveness of photomosaic method to the traditional photoquadrats technique in quantifying the coralligenous assemblage. Results showed very high spatial resolution and accuracy among the photomosaic acquired with different cameras and no significant differences with photoquadrats in assessing the assemblage composition. Despite the large difference in costs of each recording apparatus, little differences emerged from the assemblage characterization: through the analysis of the three photomosaics twelve taxa/morphological categories covered 97–99% of the sampled surface. Photo mosaicking represents a low-cost method that minimizes the time spent underwater by divers and capable of providing new opportunities for further studies on shallow coralligenous reefs.

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