Hurricane Allen's Impact on Jamaican Coral Reefs
- 13 November 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 214 (4522) , 749-755
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.214.4522.749
Abstract
Coral reefs of north Jamaica, normally sheltered, were severely damaged by Hurricane Allen, the strongest Caribbean hurricane of this century. Immediate studies were made at Discovery Bay, where reef populations were already known in some detail. Data are presented to show how damage varied with the position and orientation of the substraturn and with the shape, size, and mechanical properties of exposed organisms. Data collected over succeeding weeks showed striking differences in the ability of organisms to heal and survive.This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hurricane Allen destroys Jamaican coral reefsNature, 1980
- Do Corals Lie About Their Age? Some Demographic Consequences of Partial Mortality, Fission, and FusionScience, 1980
- Detection, Pursuit, and Overgrowth of Tropical Gorgonians by Milleporid Hydrocorals: Perseus and Medusa RevisitedScience, 1980
- The analysis of contact sampling dataOecologia, 1980
- Life History, Growth Habits, And Constructional Roles of Acropora Cervicornis in the Patch Reef EnvironmentJournal of Sedimentary Research, 1976
- Community Structure of Coral Reefs on Opposite Sides of the Isthmus of PanamaScience, 1974
- Recolonization of Hermatypic Corals on Submerged Lava Flows in HawaiiEcology, 1974
- The Geologic Effects of Hurricane Donna in South FloridaThe Journal of Geology, 1967
- A note on Bryopsis in the West IndiesPhycologia, 1962
- An Ecological Survey of the Marine Fauna of Low Isles, QueenslandMarine and Freshwater Research, 1958