Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Galaxea, Journal of Coral Reef Studies
Online ISSN : 1883-3969
Print ISSN : 1883-0838
ISSN-L : 1883-0838
Original papers
Delineating the Coral Triangle
J.E.N. VERONLyndon M. DEVANTIEREmre TURAKAlison L. GREENStuart KININMONTHMary STAFFORD-SMITHNate PETERSON
Author information
  • J.E.N. VERON

    Coral Reef Research, 10 Benalla Road, Oak Valley
    Australian Institute of Marine Science, MSO

  • Lyndon M. DEVANTIER

    Coral Reef Research, 10 Benalla Road, Oak Valley
    Australian Institute of Marine Science, MSO

  • Emre TURAK

    Coral Reef Research, 10 Benalla Road, Oak Valley
    Australian Institute of Marine Science, MSO

  • Alison L. GREEN

    The Nature Conservancy

  • Stuart KININMONTH

    Australian Institute of Marine Science, MSO

  • Mary STAFFORD-SMITH

    Coral Reef Research, 10 Benalla Road, Oak Valley

  • Nate PETERSON

    The Nature Conservancy

Corresponding author

ORCID
Keywords:coral biodiversity,reef conservation,coral triangle initiative,coral biogeography
JOURNALFREE ACCESS

2009 Volume 11Issue 2Pages 91-100

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3755/galaxea.11.91
Details
  • Published: 2009Received: May 29, 2009Available on J-STAGE: August 07, 2010Accepted: September 24, 2009Advance online publication: -Revised: -
Download PDF(424K)
Download citationRIS

(compatible with EndNote, Reference Manager, ProCite, RefWorks)

BIB TEX

(compatible with BibDesk, LaTeX)

Text
How to download citation
Contact us
Article overview
Share
Abstract
Spatial analyses of coral distributions at species level delineate the Coral Triangle and provide new insights into patterns of diversity and endemism around the globe. This study shows that the Coral Triangle, an area extending from the Philippines to the Solomon Islands, has 605 zooxanthellate corals including 15 regional endemics. This amounts to 76% of the world's total species complement, giving this province the world's highest conservation priority. Within the Coral Triangle, highest richness resides in the Bird's Head Peninsula of Indonesian Papua which hosts 574 species, with individual reefs supporting up to 280 species ha-1. Reasons for the exceptional richness of the Coral Triangle include the geological setting, physical environment and an array of ecological processes. These findings, supported by parallel distributions of reef fishes and other taxa, provide a clear scientific justification for the Coral Triangle Initiative, arguably one of the world's most significant reef conservation undertakings.
References (49)
Related articles (0)
Figures (0)
Content from these authors
Supplementary material (0)
Result List ()
Cited by (393)
© 2009 The Japanese Coral Reef Society
Previous articleNext article
Favorites & Alerts
Related articles

Recently viewed articles
    Share this page
    feedback
    Top

    Register with J-STAGE for free!

    Register

    Already have an account? Sign inhere


    [8]ページ先頭

    ©2009-2025 Movatter.jp