The paper analyses variables hypothesized to
affect the health of coral reefs. These variables include fishing pressure as
measured by fisher density and land-based human activities as indicated by
population, relative wealth, waste disposal and aspects of land use. Findings
indicating that the healthiest coral reef areas are characterized by higher
fisher densities as well as greater increases in population density were, at
first, surprising. In retrospect, the results fit perfectly with human
ecological theory; where possible, people tend to migrate from resource-poor
to resource-rich areas. Any synchronic analyses of the interrelationships
between the condition of aresource and associated population size or density
will probably be confounded by the dynamics of the populations dependent on
the resource. Hence, there is a need to account for this dynamic when
researching anthropogenic effects on coral reefs. The findings also indicate
that less-healthy reefs are found in areas with a higher percentage of land
devoted to permanent crops; this appears to be related to observed high levels
of runoff from permanent crops.
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