11 results
 Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme

This dataset shows the global distribution of coral reefs in tropical and subtropical regions. It is the most comprehensive global dataset of warm-water coral reefs to date, acting as a foundation baseline map for future, more detailed, work. This dataset was compiled from a number of sources by UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC) and the WorldFish Centre, in collaboration with WRI (World Resources Institute) and TNC (The Nature Conservancy).

 MNRET - Ministry of Natural Resources,  Environment & Tourism,  Palau

Data on the recovery of Palau's Coral Reefs

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 MNRET - Ministry of Natural Resources,  Environment & Tourism,  Palau

The Nature Conservancy’s Mapping Ocean Wealth Project: Modelling and mapping fishing pressure the current and potential standing stock of coral-reef fishes in five jurisdictions of Micronesia

 MNRET - Ministry of Natural Resources,  Environment & Tourism,  Palau

Data on impacts of human activities on Palau's Coral Reef

 MNRET - Ministry of Natural Resources,  Environment & Tourism,  Palau

Data on Palau's Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) including information on Ecological conditions of coral-reef and seagrass for marine protected areas in Palau

 OERC - Environmental Response and Coordination,  Palau

Data and Palau's modelling reports on coral bleaching and other marine threatening events

 Cook Islands National Environment Service

This dataset has information on coral reef cover and fish in Cook Islands from 1994 to 2013.

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 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority

Rapid Marine Biodiversity Assessment of Milne Bay Province, Papua New Guinea—Survey II (2000)

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 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority

Fisheries

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 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority

Coral Triangle documents

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 American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

The global decline of coral reefs had led to calls for strategies that reconcile biodiversity conservation and fisheries benefits. Still considerable gaps in our understanding of the spatial ecology of ecosystem services remain. We combined spatial information on larval dispersal networks and estimated of human pressure to test the importance of connectivity for ecosystem service provision. We found that reefs receiving larvae from highly connected dispersal corridors were associated with high fish species richness.