Data

Habitat Map for Lizard Island reef, Australia derived from a photo-transect survey field data collected in December 2011 and September/October 2012

The University of Queensland
Associate Professor Chris Roelfsema (Aggregated by) Associate Professor Chris Roelfsema (Aggregated by) Canto, Robert (Aggregated by) Dr Megan Saunders (Aggregated by) Dr Megan Saunders (Aggregated by)
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:410020&rft.title=Habitat Map for Lizard Island reef, Australia derived from a photo-transect survey field data collected in December 2011 and September/October 2012&rft.publisher=The University of Queensland&rft.description=georeferenced dive and snorkel photo-transect surveys were conducted at different locations surrounding Lizard Island, Australia. For the surveys, a snorkeler or diver swam over the bottom at a depth of 1-2m in the lagoon, One Tree Beach and Research Station areas, and 7m depth in Watson's Bay, while taking photos of the benthos at a set height using a standard digital camera and towing a surface float GPS which was logging its track every five seconds. The camera lens provided a 1.0 m x 1.0 m footprint, at 0.5 m height above the benthos. Horizontal distance between photos was estimated by fin kicks, and corresponded to a surface distance of approximately 2.0 - 4.0 m. Approximation of coordinates of each benthic photo was done based on the photo timestamp and GPS coordinate time stamp, using GPS Photo Link Software (www.geospatialexperts.com). Coordinates of each photo were interpolated by finding the gps coordinates that were logged at a set time before and after the photo was captured. Dominant benthic or substrate cover type was assigned to each photo by placing 24 points random over each image using the Coral Point Count excel program (Kohler and Gill, 2006). Each point was then assigned a dominant cover type using a benthic cover type classification scheme containing nine first-level categories - seagrass high (>=70%), seagrass moderate (40-70%), seagrass low (&rft.creator=Associate Professor Chris Roelfsema&rft.creator=Associate Professor Chris Roelfsema&rft.creator=Canto, Robert&rft.creator=Dr Megan Saunders&rft.creator=Dr Megan Saunders&rft.creator=Javier Leon&rft.creator=Leon, Javier&rft.creator=Mr Javier Leon&rft.creator=Mr Javier Leon&rft.creator=Mr Robert Canto&rft.creator=Mr Robert Canto&rft.creator=Phinn, Stuart&rft.creator=Phinn, Stuart&rft.creator=Professor Stuart Phinn&rft.creator=Professor Stuart Phinn&rft.creator=Roelfsema, Christiaan&rft.creator=Roelfsema, Christiaan&rft.creator=Saunders, Megan&rft.creator=Saunders, Megan&rft.date=2014&rft.coverage=145.477613,-14.646311 145.442718,-14.646311 145.442718,-14.686717 145.477613,-14.686717 145.477613,-14.646311&rft_rights=2014, The University of Queensland&rft_rights= http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en_US&rft_subject=eng&rft_subject=ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES&rft_subject=ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND MANAGEMENT&rft_subject=Environmental Monitoring&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en_US

2014, The University of Queensland

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Contact Information

c.roelfsema@uq.edu.au

Full description

georeferenced dive and snorkel photo-transect surveys were conducted at different locations surrounding Lizard Island, Australia. For the surveys, a snorkeler or diver swam over the bottom at a depth of 1-2m in the lagoon, One Tree Beach and Research Station areas, and 7m depth in Watson's Bay, while taking photos of the benthos at a set height using a standard digital camera and towing a surface float GPS which was logging its track every five seconds. The camera lens provided a 1.0 m x 1.0 m footprint, at 0.5 m height above the benthos. Horizontal distance between photos was estimated by fin kicks, and corresponded to a surface distance of approximately 2.0 - 4.0 m. Approximation of coordinates of each benthic photo was done based on the photo timestamp and GPS coordinate time stamp, using GPS Photo Link Software (www.geospatialexperts.com). Coordinates of each photo were interpolated by finding the gps coordinates that were logged at a set time before and after the photo was captured. Dominant benthic or substrate cover type was assigned to each photo by placing 24 points random over each image using the Coral Point Count excel program (Kohler and Gill, 2006). Each point was then assigned a dominant cover type using a benthic cover type classification scheme containing nine first-level categories - seagrass high (>=70%), seagrass moderate (40-70%), seagrass low (<= 30%), coral, reef matrix, algae, rubble, rock and sand. Benthic cover composition summaries of each photo were generated automatically in CPCe. The resulting benthic cover data for each photo was linked to GPS coordinates, saved as an ArcMap point shapefile, and projected to Universal Transverse Mercator WGS84 Zone 56 South. The OBIA class assignment followed a hierarchical assignment based on membership rules with levels for "reef", "geomorphic zone" and "benthic community" (above).

Issued: 2014

Data time period: 12 2011 to 10 2012

This dataset is part of a larger collection

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145.47761,-14.64631 145.44272,-14.64631 145.44272,-14.68672 145.47761,-14.68672 145.47761,-14.64631

145.4601655,-14.666514

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Other Information
Spatial and temporal variability of seagrass at Lizard Island, Great Barrier Reef

local : UQ:352237

Saunders, Megan I., Bayraktarov, Elisa, Roelfsema, Chris M., Leon, Javier X., Samper-Villarreal, Jimena, Phinn, Stuart R., Lovelock, Catherine E. and Mumby, Peter J. (2015). Spatial and temporal variability of seagrass at Lizard Island, Great Barrier Reef. Botanica Marina, 58 (1), 35-49. doi: 10.1515/bot-2014-0060

Interdependency of tropical marine ecosystems in response to climate change

local : UQ:337357

Saunders, Megan I., Leon, Javier X., Callaghan, David P., Roelfsema, Chris M., Hamylton, Sarah, Brown, Christopher J., Baldock, Tom, Golshani, Aliasghar, Phinn, Stuart R., Lovelock, Catherine E., Hoegh-Guldberg, Ove, Woodroffe, Colin D. and Mumby, Peter J. (2014). Interdependency of tropical marine ecosystems in response to climate change. Nature Climate Change, 4 (8), 724-729. doi: 10.1038/nclimate2274

Research Data Collections

local : UQ:289097

School of Earth Sciences Publications

local : UQ:161068