Quantifying coral reef carbonate budgets: a comparison between ReefBudget and CoralNet

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Standard Standard

Quantifying coral reef carbonate budgets: a comparison between ReefBudget and CoralNet. / Sannassy Pilly, Jyodee; Townsend, Joseph E.; Alisa, Cut Aja Gita et al.
In: Coral Reefs, 17.03.2025.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Sannassy Pilly, J, Townsend, JE, Alisa, CAG, Razak, TB, Turner, J, Roche, R, Chan, S, Kriegman, DJ, Andersson, AJ, Perry, CT, Lange, ID & Courtney, TA 2025, 'Quantifying coral reef carbonate budgets: a comparison between ReefBudget and CoralNet', Coral Reefs. https://doi.org/10. 1007/s00338- 025- 02620-1.

APA

Sannassy Pilly, J., Townsend, J. E., Alisa, C. A. G., Razak, T. B., Turner, J., Roche, R., Chan, S., Kriegman, D. J., Andersson, A. J., Perry, C. T., Lange, I. D., & Courtney, T. A. (2025). Quantifying coral reef carbonate budgets: a comparison between ReefBudget and CoralNet. Coral Reefs. https://doi.org/10. 1007/s00338- 025- 02620-1.

CBE

Sannassy Pilly J, Townsend JE, Alisa CAG, Razak TB, Turner J, Roche R, Chan S, Kriegman DJ, Andersson AJ, Perry CT, et al. 2025. Quantifying coral reef carbonate budgets: a comparison between ReefBudget and CoralNet. Coral Reefs. https://doi.org/10. 1007/s00338- 025- 02620-1.

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Sannassy Pilly J, Townsend JE, Alisa CAG, Razak TB, Turner J, Roche R et al. Quantifying coral reef carbonate budgets: a comparison between ReefBudget and CoralNet. Coral Reefs. 2025 Mar 17. doi: 10. 1007/s00338- 025- 02620-1.

Author

Sannassy Pilly, Jyodee ; Townsend, Joseph E. ; Alisa, Cut Aja Gita et al. / Quantifying coral reef carbonate budgets: a comparison between ReefBudget and CoralNet. In: Coral Reefs. 2025.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Quantifying coral reef carbonate budgets: a comparison between ReefBudget and CoralNet

AU - Sannassy Pilly, Jyodee

AU - Townsend, Joseph E.

AU - Alisa, Cut Aja Gita

AU - Razak, Tries B.

AU - Turner, John

AU - Roche, Ronan

AU - Chan, Stephen

AU - Kriegman, David J.

AU - Andersson, Andreas J.

AU - Perry, Chris T.

AU - Lange, Ines D.

AU - Courtney, Travis A.

PY - 2025/3/17

Y1 - 2025/3/17

N2 - Calcium carbonate production constitutes one of the core processes that drive coral reef ecosystem functioning and can be assessed using in-water or image-based survey methods, which have not previously been compared. This study compares carbonate production estimates from in-water ReefBudget surveys and image-based CoralNet analyses in Puerto Rico, Indonesia, and Chagos Archipelago. Methods were compared for different regions (Western Atlantic and Indo-Pacific), reef settings (low and high coral cover), CoralNet calcification versions (v1 and v2), and input metrics (regional vs. local coral growth rates). We show similar gross carbonate production estimates between methods, indicating that area-normalised scaling of calcification rates and assumptions about colony size and rugosity employed in CoralNet produce comparable estimates to ReefBudget surveys. Divergences in carbonate production estimates are potentially driven by differences in survey methods (reef contour measurements vs. planar imagery) and survey effort, which affect calcifier cover estimates, particularly at low coral cover sites. Local versus regional growth rate comparisons suggest site-specific factors can influence accuracy more than method choice. Our findings suggest that image-based methods can allow rapid reefscale calcification estimates from photo or video imagery. These methods, combined with machine learning substrate classification algorithms, can estimate both benthic cover and carbonate production over larger reef areas and can be applied to historically collect benthic cover data to track carbonate production trends. We encourage researchers to recognise situation-specific differences in methodologies and select the one most suitable for their specific study site, required level of accuracy, and time constraints for fieldwork and image analysis.

AB - Calcium carbonate production constitutes one of the core processes that drive coral reef ecosystem functioning and can be assessed using in-water or image-based survey methods, which have not previously been compared. This study compares carbonate production estimates from in-water ReefBudget surveys and image-based CoralNet analyses in Puerto Rico, Indonesia, and Chagos Archipelago. Methods were compared for different regions (Western Atlantic and Indo-Pacific), reef settings (low and high coral cover), CoralNet calcification versions (v1 and v2), and input metrics (regional vs. local coral growth rates). We show similar gross carbonate production estimates between methods, indicating that area-normalised scaling of calcification rates and assumptions about colony size and rugosity employed in CoralNet produce comparable estimates to ReefBudget surveys. Divergences in carbonate production estimates are potentially driven by differences in survey methods (reef contour measurements vs. planar imagery) and survey effort, which affect calcifier cover estimates, particularly at low coral cover sites. Local versus regional growth rate comparisons suggest site-specific factors can influence accuracy more than method choice. Our findings suggest that image-based methods can allow rapid reefscale calcification estimates from photo or video imagery. These methods, combined with machine learning substrate classification algorithms, can estimate both benthic cover and carbonate production over larger reef areas and can be applied to historically collect benthic cover data to track carbonate production trends. We encourage researchers to recognise situation-specific differences in methodologies and select the one most suitable for their specific study site, required level of accuracy, and time constraints for fieldwork and image analysis.

KW - Reef carbonate budgets · ReefBudget · CoralNet · In-water survey methods · Image-based approaches

U2 - 10. 1007/s00338- 025- 02620-1.

DO - 10. 1007/s00338- 025- 02620-1.

M3 - Article

JO - Coral Reefs

JF - Coral Reefs

SN - 0722-4028

ER -