
Eye on the Reef
Program

Participatory coral reef monitoring and education programs for commercially important tourism sites.

"The Eye on the Reef Program produces site-specific information on reef stresses of direct relevance to the nature-based reef tourism industry.
These records, although gathered by non-scientists, now provide invaluable research clues to our understanding of whale distribution and abundance, population dynamics and migration routes - all highly relevant issues to the effective management and conservation of cetaceans So the concept of the community gathering useful environmental information is not a new idea, and has been an integral part of resource management for many years. What has changed is our attitude to the value of this information. Today, science and scientists provide the community with the bulk of our knowledge and understanding of the environment. This, together with socio-economic and political considerations, provides the basis for our decision making, legislation and resource management.
In the field of environmental management the most under utilised resource today is the community. Ever since the first rock art drawings were used to depict images of animals needed for survival, the community has contributed valuable information to our understanding of the environment. For many years the community has been our only "eye on the environment". The 19th Century whalers for example, documented the location and species of each whale caught some 200 years ago.

"In the field of environmental management
the most under utilised resource today is the community."
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Community involvement provides for a much needed feedback mechanism as to whether these decisions and resulting management strategies are relevant and effective in producing the desired outcomes. The Eye on the Reef Program was developed as a hands-on reef monitoring and education program from within the reef tourism industry on the Great Barrier Reef, and has gained support from key community and conservation groups. Government initiatives and in-kind support from the reef tourism industry have acted as a catalyst for this project. The Eye on the Reef Program is designed to establish a better understanding of reef ecosystems management and coral health issues, as seen through the eyes of its trained participants: usually non-scientists such as reef tourism personnel and marine rangers responsible for policy implementation at remote reef sites. It solidifies the cooperation between different stakeholders relying on the quality of the marine environment, upon which many livelihoods depend and enables the community to become an active partner in reef monitoring and conservation. |

2. Reef Use: 3. Large Marine Creatures: 4. 'Target' Reef Animals: These monitoring parameters were selected by consulting local community groups, the reef tourism industry, government reef management agencies and Aboriginal communities.
1. Environmental Conditions:

It is of great importance to understand the ecological conditions that favour coral reef stress in order to assess which levels of coral stress are naturally occurring on a pristine 'healthy' reef system, and whether coral health is influenced in any way by specific human activities. The active participation reef monitoring and education program outlined here will increase our understanding of this important aspect of coral reef conservation.
"This early warning capacity of the Eye on the Reef is of great value to the reef tourism industry especially."
In addition, the program helps to identify pressure points of reef use. These can be defined as reef sites where two or more conflicting activities take place simultaneously. The activities reported can be legal within the marine park zonation specifications, yet may not be compatible within a relatively small reef area, or reports may indicate illegal activities such as destructive fishing practices or deliberate oil spills.
The program can point to the impending build-up of coral predators and other indicators of coral health, such as the Crown-of-Thorns Starfish (Acanthaster planci) or various coral diseases, such as the aggressive Black-banding disease.

The program has established highly trained individuals to visually monitor coral reefs and verify observations from those involved without formal training, such as tourists or interested locals. The Eye on the Reef is designed to be easily transportable and trainable. Its methods are deliberately low-tech with an emphasis on user friendliness and consistent data quality. Thus the program is also of relevance to monitoring remote reef areas.
The program's data is collected by trained non-scientists and is referred to industry, government, and scientific institutes. Data is compiled in a customised, query-based and user-friendly Eye on the Reef Database. Periodic status reports with site-specific results are send to the operators involved and management authorities.

"The Eye on the Reef monitoring program combines marine environmental monitoring with education and interpretation activities. It increases community awareness of reef conservation issues and produces valuable data on important biological indicators of coral reef health."
The data, although collected by non-scientists and partly anecdotal, produces useful results in base-line and seasonal occurrences of the targeted wildlife and environmental perturbations occurring on commercially important reef sites. Any areas of special scientific or management interest can then be further investigated by management authorities. In addition, the programs result in an increased interest and overall awareness of the reef tourism industry in its working environment, and are of great benefit to the operator's activities, marketing approach and clientele satisfaction.

Both the Acropora Coral Health and the Eye on the Reef Monitoring Programs facilitate a way in which the reef's (eco)tourism industry can participate directly in innovative reef monitoring and education programs.
For more information please contact our office via this e-mail address.
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