“…As in terrestrial ecology, stereophotography enables reference-free and non-invasive measurements of object coordinates in the 3D realm, thus eliminating the need for a parallel estimation of quantitative parameters such as distance or volume (e.g. Cullen et al, 1965;Rorslett et al, 1978;Van Rooij and Videler, 1996;Costa et al, 2006;Williams et al, 2010). Photographic assessments of time series of communities also allow the estimation of quantitative derivatives, including growth or productivity over time, using an empirically determined relationship between biomass and linear measurements (Williams, 1969;Rorslett et al, 1978;Fischer et al, 2007;Williams et al, 2010, Doya et al, 2014.…”