4.6 Article

Underwater macrophotogrammetry to monitor in situ benthic communities at submillimetre scale

Journal

METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/2041-210X.14175

Keywords

3D; Agisoft Metashape; coral reefs; macrophotography; monitoring; photogrammetry; recruitment; structure from motion

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This study used macrophotogrammetry techniques to monitor benthic communities underwater and investigate recruitment and community succession. The researchers found that regardless of the imaging system used, there was a good level of resolution and accuracy in locating and measuring small organisms. This method can be applied to study recruitment and recovery processes in benthic environments, avoiding biases associated with laboratory analysis of artificial surfaces.
1. Larval settlement and recruitment of sessile organisms are key ecological processes for population recovery and maintenance that occur at scales invisible to the human eye. Accordingly, proxies of recruitment have commonly been quantified using artificial substrata such as settlement tiles made of diverse materials and shapes, which are typically transported to the laboratory for examination. However, it is unknown how much bias is introduced with this sampling strategy and how recruitment quantified on tiles relates to recruitment on nearby natural substrata. 2. Here, we applied techniques that combine macrophotography with photogrammetry (macrophotogrammetry) underwater to monitor benthic communities at submillimetre scale. This application allows the investigation of recruitment and community succession of the earliest life-history stages in situ and on natural substrata. 3. We tested the use of four different imaging systems, varying in costs from US$ 1400 to US$ 5440. While the most expensive SONY alpha Riv system provided the best visual output and ground resolution (up to 5 mu m/pixel with a + 4 close-up lens); regardless of systems, 3D models always had a ground resolution <= 23 mu m/pixel and errors in planar measurements of submillimetre features were similar among systems. This level of resolution compares well with stereomicroscopy in the range of 5:1 to 10:1 magnification, while providing detailed 3D digital records through time. 4. Using a coral reef example, we apply this approach to demonstrate how it can be used to monitor small reef areas (similar to 300-600 cm(2)) through time, including the quantification of biophysical metrics such as cover of small facilitative and competitive organisms and microhabitat complexity. We further show that organisms as small 0.5 mm in size, such as 2-month-old coral settlers, can be located accurately within the 3D models and measured with a good level of confidence. This method can be readily applied to other benthic environments to elucidate drivers of early recruitment and recovery of benthic organisms following disturbance impacts at very fine scales, directly on natural substrata, to avoid biases inherent with laboratory-based analyses of artificial surfaces.

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